Advocates use tricky math against housing abundance
Anti-poverty advocates are using some tricky math to push back on the “abundance” movement as a solution to housing affordability. A new report by the Center on Poverty and Inequality at Georgetown Law School says that in markets where developers built a lot of housing, rents for low-income units went up more than for other units. The researchers got their study featured in a New York Times article. But the actual rent increases might have been smaller than the report made them seem, and in the context of rising expenses, they should surprise absolutely no one. Nor are they an […]
This article originally appeared on The Real Deal. Click here to read the full story.
Categories
Recent Posts

Inside the Search: Choosing the Right Deal in Chicago With
Taka Buranda

It’s a Family Affair: Multigenerational Living Rental Can
Help Landlords Boost Income While Offering Tenants
Affordability

PolicyPro: J-51 reboot flops for rent-regulated landlords,
boosts co-ops and condos

Hotel union deal puts cleaners on track for $100K
salaries

Mamdani targets Brooklyn corridors for major housing
push 

Saunders partners with Premier Estate Properties to link
ultralux markets

RealPage rent-fixing settlements pass $200M (and
counting)

Record High Mortgage Debt Sounds Scary. Here’s What the
Headlines Leave Out.

Richard Born dumps Chambers Hotel for $66M

NYC’s top deals: Benchmark scoops up $42M apartment complex
on UWS


