U.S. rents surge, leaving behind generation of younger workers
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[September 21, 2022] By
Rose Horowitch
(Reuters) - The cost of renting a home in
the United States is surging and young workers have felt the sharpest
pain, many of them taking on additional jobs or roommates to afford
housing costs.
Household rents in 2021 jumped 10% from pre-pandemic levels, according
to Census Bureau estimates released last week. The figures came as
rising healthcare and rental costs pushed U.S. consumer prices up
unexpectedly last month.
The data from the bureau’s annual American Community Survey put median
U.S. rent at $1,037 in 2021, up from $941 in 2019. Year-over-year
increases in the median household rent over the past decade were
typically 2% or 3% - one exception was the 5% rise from 2018 to 2019.
Among those affected most are recent college graduates and other new
entrants to the workforce, who have little in savings and cannot afford
to buy a house.
Take Maeve Kozlark, a New York University doctoral student. The
23-year-old spent a year in an apartment in New York City's Queens
borough with a door that wouldn’t lock. Her landlord's refusal to fix
the latch prompted her to make a TikTok video about it.
A year and 230,000 views later, the lock was still broken when her
landlord announced a $1,000 hike on top of her existing rent of $2,500,
Kozlark said. She left the apartment in June.
"So began our crazy search to find something that was affordable and not
a shoebox, which is pretty impossible,” said Kozlark, who considers
herself lucky to have found a new place to rent for $3,300 in Queens.
Similar accounts of abrupt price hikes and rental struggles abound
across the country. In Austin, Texas, 22-year-old Skyler Lee signed a
one-year lease for a two-bedroom apartment for which she and her
boyfriend together pay $1950 a month in rent.
Within a month of moving in, comparable apartments in the building were
being rented out at $2,400 per month - the price Lee expects to pay to
renew her lease next year.
In Chicago, 23-year-old Kelvin Angelo Cupay decided to forego renting
altogether and move in with family in Chicago because he expects to have
to fork out close to $1000 in monthly rent, which he cannot afford while
searching for a job.
On the West Coast, Celine Pun, 21, initially added a housemate to her
Santa Barbara apartment to make costs affordable. But she ended up
moving out when the $600 in monthly rent for her share of the
three-bedroom apartment rose by $50 and some of her five housemates
left.
"It was a very frustrating process,” Pun said.
'TRULY UNPRECEDENTED'
Adding to renters' woes, rents in the professionally-managed sector -
usually larger properties operated by management companies - have risen
even more dramatically.
Annual rent growth there hit 11.6% at the end of 2021 and start of 2022,
about three times what it was in the five years prior to the pandemic,
according to the Harvard Joint Center for Housing Studies. At the same
time, vacancy rates fell to their lowest since 1984 as post-pandemic
demand surged.
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Maeve Kozlark poses for a portrait at
her residence in Queens' neighborhood of Ridgewood, New York, U.S.,
September 16, 2022. REUTERS/Amr Alfiky
"It’s a truly unprecedented market in a lot of ways,” said Whitney
Airgood-Obrycki, a senior research associate at the Harvard housing
center.
A key factor in all this has been the COVID-19 pandemic.
As coronavirus infections spread in 2020, wealthier people went to
summer homes or remote areas to avoid infection, leading to
vacancies and steep rent reductions in many cities.
Now, landlords are making up for those losses while also trying to
recoup higher maintenance and insurance costs, said Alexandra
Alvarado, marketing director at the American Apartment Owners
Association, which represents smaller landlords.
With low supply in large cities and rural areas where more people
have moved for remote work, landlords can ask prospective tenants to
show higher incomes than previously required, she said.
Adding to the demand, the millennial generation of mostly those in
their thirties continues to live in apartments and is unable to
purchase homes, said Michael Keane, adjunct professor of urban
planning at New York University.
"They’re sort of stonewalling the new rental population that was
behind them,” he said.
Some minority groups are also likely to feel the pinch more. Black
renters are less likely to have parents who own homes – a key source
of wealth in the United States — and can help them financially, said
Ingrid Gould Ellen, professor of urban policy and planning at New
York University.
A recent survey by real estate company Zillow found that renters of
color are asked to pay higher security deposits and more application
fees than their white counterparts.
All of this has made for a market where just securing any apartment
can be a big deal in some areas. In New York - long known for its
competitive and pricey rental market - apartment hunters have
reported encountering landlords seeking tenants with an annual
salary at least 40 times a month’s rent, or with guarantors who make
more than 80 times a month’s rent.
Recent college graduate Caleb Seamon, 22, started delivering for
Uber Eats alongside his full-time job at a think-tank to afford
housing. Even so, Seamon says he only found a New York apartment
because one of his roommate's parents acted as guarantors.
“It’s a remarkably hard and privileged thing to be able to get even
just the cheapest apartment on the market right now here,” Seamon
said.
(Reporting by Rose Horowitch in New Haven, Conn., Editing by Donna
Bryson and Deepa Babington)
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