Best of Both Worlds
Permanent affordability and asset building might seem at first blush to be contradictory goals for a low-income homeownership program, but new research says in fact they can be achieved together.
In the mid 1990s, the homeownership rate began to rise for the first time in decades. Social equity advocates were encouraged by the fact that, also for the first time, it appeared that ownership for lower income buyers and buyers of color was rising even faster. Policymakers in Washington cheered the fact that this change seemed to come from private mortgage market innovation rather than increased federal spending.
Looking back, this all seems like a dream—or rather a nightmare. Rather than opening a door to economic opportunity for disadvantaged families, “innovative” mortgage products led to financial ruin for families and for our whole economy.
The foreclosure crisis has led some policymakers to call for abandoning the goal of expanding access to homeownership. Certainly ownership has been oversold, and the current crisis demands a rethinking of housing policy including greater investment in affordable rental housing. But persistent and still-growing asset inequality (itself largely a product of discrimination in earlier generations of housing policy) remains a problem with very significant consequences, one that is unlikely to go away on its own. Any serious effort to overcome persistent asset inequality will require renewed efforts to overcome barriers to homeownership.
Luckily, relaxing credit standards is not the only strategy for expanding access to homeownership. Decades of experimentation in state and local programs have shown that it is possible to invest in homeownership in smarter and more sustainable ways. A new research report from the Urban Institute suggests that local programs that provide significant purchase assistance to low-income buyers while preserving long-term affordability can offer a sustainable and scalable strategy for overcoming generational asset inequality.
Rick Jacobus is director of the Cornerstone Partnership, a peer network for homeownership programs that preserve long-term affordability and community stability.
RELATED RESOURCES
- Balancing Affordability and Opportunity: An Evaluation of Affordable Homeownership Programs with Long-term Affordability Controls, by Ken Temkin, Brett Theodos, and David Price. Urban Institute, October 2010.
- Homeownership Today and Tomorrow: Building Assets While Preserving Affordability, by Miriam Axel-Lute. NCB Capital Impact, October 2010.
- For more on wealth as a barrier to ownership:
- Net worth and asset ownership of households: 1998 and 2000, by S. Orzechowski and P. Sepielli, Current Population Reports, US Census Bureau, 2003.
- Who Can Afford to Buy a House in 2004? by H. Savage. US Census Bureau, Current Housing Reports H121/09-1 (May 2009): 971.
- The Asset Building Potential of Shared Equity Homeownership, by Rick Jacobus and John E. Davis. Working Paper, New America Foundation, January 2010.
- For more on programs that preserve long-term affordability:
- Shared Equity Homeownership: The Changing Landscape of Resale-Restricted, Owner-Occupied Housing, by John E. Davis. National Housing Institute, 2006.

National Housing Institute
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