

Housing prices are spiraling alongside homelessness. We need to recognize housing as a human right.

By Farrah Hassen
2008 Carol Jean and Edward F. Newman Fellow
Institute for Policy Studies
โHow we gonna pay last yearโs rent?โ the chorus implores in the song โRentโ from Jonathan Larsonโs 1996 musical of the same name.
Itโs the same refrain for many Americans today. A new Harvardย studyย found thatย halfย of U.S. renter households now spendย more than 30 percentย of their income on rent and utilities. And rent increases continue to outpace their income gains.
Withย other studies confirming thatย homelessness grows alongside housing costs, this means many more people are vulnerable. Last year, homelessness hit an all-time national high ofย 653,100 people.
In the wealthiest country on the planet, this is unacceptable.
The pandemic revealed the full extent of the U.S. housing crisis, with roughlyย 580,000 peopleย in 2020 living unhoused during โstay at homeโ orders. But it also proved that federal intervention could ease the crisis. Eviction moratoria and unemployment reliefย helped keep more people housed, fed, and secure.
But these initiatives ended too quickly. With homelessness spiking alongside hunger and child poverty, we need to bring those programs back โ and more. We need to prioritize making housing affordable, accessible, and habitable for everyone.
Over the past decade, according to the Harvard study, the majority ofย growthย in renter households has come from Millennials and Gen Zers who continue to be priced out of homeownership while also paying more for a declining supply of affordable units.
Meanwhile, construction in the high-end โluxuryโ rental market, which drives up rents for everyone else, remains in anย upward trend. And private equity firms like Blackstone, the largest landlord in the U.S., have beenย expandingย their real estate portfolios. These trends have fueled increasedย housing costsย andย evictionsย across communities.
The Harvard study revealed that our nationโs aging rental stock also needs crucial investment.ย Nearly half of rentersย with disabilities live in homes that are minimally or not at all accessible. Further,ย around 4 millionย renter households live in units with structural problems and lack basic services like electricity, water, or heat.
The lack of decent, affordable housing is a policy choice that can be overcome if our federal, state, and local governments prioritize taking much-needed action. Increasing the supply of affordable housing and expanding rental subsidies for lower income renters will help address this housing crisis. But they will not fully resolve it.
Ultimately, it is long past time for our country to change its approach to housing. We need to recognize housing as a human right fundamental to every personโs life, health, and security โ instead of as a luxury commodity limited to those who can afford it.
International law already recognizes housing as aย human right. Countries are legallyย obligatedย to respect, protect, and fulfill this right by enacting relevant policies and budgets to progressively realize adequate housing for all.
What might that look like?ย Possibilities includeย rent controls, housing assistance programs, reining in corporate landlords, and creating community land trusts and housing cooperatives to build permanently affordable rental units and homes.
These affordability measures must be combined with legal protections againstย forced evictionsย and housing discrimination, along with regulations toย ensureย that housing is physically habitable and connected to essential services.
The housing justice movement keeps growing, thanks to the sustained advocacy of community groups across the country.
Inย California,ย Connecticut, and elsewhere, they are pushing for legislation that would recognize the right to housing at the state level. Colorado lawmakers are consideringย legislationย that would offer tenants โjust-causeโ eviction protections. In Congress, the โHousing is a Human Right Actโ introduced last year wouldย provideย over $300 billion for housing infrastructure and combating homelessness.
The song โRentโ concludes, โCause everything is rent.โ But it shouldnโt have to be.
Originally published by OtherWords, 02.21.2024, under the terms of a Creative Commons Attribution-No Derivative 3.0 license.


