Six years of crisis have changed forever the way Americans think about housing. It’s good news for rental housing and not so good news for the home ownership industry, according to a massive new study conducted by Hart Research for the MacArthur Foundation.
“Transformational” changes have taken place in the way people think about housing as a result of their often traumatic experiences during the housing crisis. No longer is owning a home considered more stable than renting, and the stigma associated with renting has dissipated following years of headlines about homes lost to foreclosure and financial security that disappeared with millions of homeowners’ equity.
Though nearly three out of four (72 percent) of the renters among the 1433 adults who took part in the survey still aspire to own a home at some point in their lives, homeownership was the big loser in the study that included a survey and ten focus groups.
Some key findings:
- There’s been a seismic shift in renting versus owning. Some 57 percent of adults believe that “buying has become less appealing,” and by nearly the same percentage (54 percent), a majority believes that “renting has become more appealing” than it was before, producing a net shift of 60 percent.
- Nearly half of current owners (45 percent) can see themselves renting at some point in the future.
- Homeownership is no longer synonymous with the American Dream. Three in 5 adults (61 percent) believe that “renters can be just as successful as owners at achieving the American Dream.” This sentiment is broadly felt, among owners (59 percent) as well as renters (67 percent), and across all regions of the country.
- Ownership is no guarantee of housing stability. Nearly half of all respondents (45 percent), owners and renters, have experienced a time in their life when their “housing situation was not stable and secure.”
These changing attitudes extend to the way Americans perceive governmental housing policies. After having been provided with information about U.S. housing policy and demographic and lifestyle changes, more than 3 in 5 self-identified Democrats (69%), Republicans (62%), and Independents (65%) believe the “focus of our housing policy should be fairly equally split on rental housing and housing for people to own.” This balanced approach toward government policies supporting both rental housing and homeownership shows similar support among all races, ages, regions, and income levels.
This post was last modified on %s = human-readable time difference 3:48 am
Just back out of hospital in early March for home recovery. Therapist coming today.
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