A drone
view of
new
residential
home
construction
at Fox
Point
Farms, a
development
by Shea
Homes,
is shown
in
Encinitas,
California,
U.S.,
June 18,
2024.
REUTERS/Mike
Blake/File
Photo |
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Harris
puts
housing
at
center
of
economic
pitch to
US
voters
By
Andy
Sullivan
5–7
minutes
Item
1 of 2
Democratic
presidential
nominee
and U.S.
Vice
President
Kamala
Harris
speaks
on the
stage on
Day 4 of
the
Democratic
National
Convention
(DNC) at
the
United
Center
in
Chicago,
Illinois,
U.S.,
August
22,
2024.
REUTERS/Mike
Blake/File
Photo
[1/2]Democratic
presidential
nominee
and U.S.
Vice
President
Kamala
Harris
speaks
on the
stage on
Day 4 of
the
Democratic
National
Convention
(DNC) at
the
United
Center
in
Chicago,
Illinois,
U.S.,
August
22,
2024.
REUTERS/Mike
Blake/File
Photo
Purchase
Licensing
Rights,
opens
new tab
WASHINGTON,
Aug 26
(Reuters)
-
Democratic
presidential
nominee
Kamala
Harris
is
promising
to build
more
housing
as the
centerpiece
of an
effort
to
tackle
rising
costs
that
have
stressed
U.S.
households
and left
home
ownership
beyond
the
reach of
many
Americans.
While
Harris
has
deliberately
steered
clear of
some
policy
specifics
in her
month-old
presidential
bid, she
has laid
out
detailed
plans to
spur new
construction
and
reduce
costs
for
renters
and
homebuyers,
largely
through
tax
incentives.
"We
will end
America's
housing
shortage,"
she said
as she
accepted
the
Democratic
presidential
nomination
last
week.
Republican
presidential
candidate
Donald
Trump's
campaign
has also
promised
to
reduce
costs
through
tax
breaks
and
reduced
regulations.
But on
the
campaign
trail,
he has
defended
local
housing
restrictions
that
prevent
many
types of
affordable
housing
from
being
built.
Voters
rate
housing
costs as
their
second-most
important
economic
worry,
after
fears of
rising
prices
and
stagnating
income,
a
Reuters/Ipsos
opinion
poll
found in
May.
Housing
construction
collapsed
during
the
2007-2009
financial
crisis
and has
been
slow to
recover
in the
years
since,
leaving
the
United
States
short
2.9
million
units,
according
to
Moody's
Analytics.
Pandemic-driven
shortages
of
construction
materials
pushed
up the
price of
new
housing,
while
rising
interest
rates
made
mortgages
more
expensive.
U.S.
home
prices
have
risen
50% in
the last
five
years
and
rents
have
risen
35%,
according
to real
estate
firm
Zillow.
Harris'
housing
plan
could
help her
win over
voters
in an
election
where
economic
concerns
are
paramount,
said
Alyssa
Cass, a
Democratic
strategist
who says
the
issue is
a top
concern
in focus
groups.
"Anything
that
would
reduce
the cost
of
housing
is music
to
voters'
ears,"
she
said.
At
an Aug.
16
campaign
stop in
North
Carolina,
Harris
called
for
building
3
million
more
housing
units in
four
years,
on top
of the 1
million
or so
built
annually
by the
private
sector,
through
a new
tax
credit
for
developers
who
build
homes
aimed at
first-time
homebuyers
and a
$25,000
tax
credit
for
those
buyers.
She
also
proposed
a $40
billion
fund to
encourage
local
governments
to build
more
affordable
housing,
streamlining
regulations
and
expanding
rental
aid,
among
other
steps.
The
Committee
for a
Responsible
Federal
Budget,
a
nonpartisan
watchdog
group,
estimates
those
policies
would
cost at
least
$200
billion
over 10
years.
If
elected
president,
Harris
might
have
trouble
enacting
those
policies
into law
as
similar
proposals
from
President
Joe
Biden
have
failed
to clear
Congress.
Trump's
position
is less
clear.
The
Republican
Party's
platform
calls
for
boosting
home
ownership
through
tax
breaks
and
eliminating
regulations,
though
it does
not
outline
specifics.
However,
Trump
also has
spoken
against
proposals
to
loosen
local
zoning
restrictions
that
prevent
apartments,
duplexes
and
other
forms of
affordable
housing
from
being
built in
neighborhoods
reserved
for
single
family
houses.
“I
keep
hearing
about
the
suburban
woman
doesn't
like
Trump,"
he said
at a
campaign
event in
Howell,
Michigan
last
week. "I
keep the
suburbs
safe. I
stopped
low-income
towers
from
rising
right
alongside
of their
house,
and I'm
keeping
the
illegal
aliens
away
from the
suburbs."
Trump's
running
mate,
U.S.
Senator
JD
Vance,
has
blamed
immigrants
for the
housing
shortage.
Jenny
Schuetz,
a
housing
expert
at the
nonpartisan
Brookings
Institution,
said
that
comment
amounted
to a
"not
very
subtle
dog
whistle"
that
recalled
the
racially
charged
housing
fights
of the
1970s,
when
white
residents
resisted
efforts
to
integrate
suburban
areas.
"Trying
to frame
housing
affordability
as a
social
issue,
rather
than an
economic
one,
isn't
helpful
to
actually
addressing
the
problem,"
she
said.
During
Trump's
2017-2021
presidency,
his
housing
secretary
Ben
Carson
proposed
easing
zoning
rules
but did
not take
action.
More
recently,
he
called
for
opposing
any
efforts
to
weaken
single-family
zoning
in
Project
2025, a
conservative
policy
plan
that has
been
disavowed
by the
Trump
campaign.
Harris
has not
said
whether
she
would
push
local
governments
to
loosen
zoning
regulations,
but she
has been
involved
in a
broader
Biden
administration
effort
to
encourage
development.
In
June,
she
announced
$85
million
in
grants
to 21
local
governments
to
remove
"barriers
to
affordable
housing,"
including
reforming
land-use
policies
in some
areas.
The
Biden
administration
plans to
distribute
another
$100
million
later
this
year.
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