NMHC: Rent Payment Tracker Finds Decline in People Paying Rent in July
http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/CalculatedRisk/~3/1ZhrhQESMt8/nmhc-rent-payment-tracker-finds-decline.html
http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/CalculatedRisk/~3/1ZhrhQESMt8/nmhc-rent-payment-tracker-finds-decline.html
Without further disaster relief, there will a significant housing and financial issue.
From the NMHC: NMHC Rent Payment Tracker Finds 77.4 Percent of Apartment Households Paid Rent as of July 6
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From the NMHC: NMHC Rent Payment Tracker Finds 77.4 Percent of Apartment Households Paid Rent as of July 6
The National Multifamily Housing Council (NMHC)'s Rent Payment Tracker found 77.4 percent of apartment households made a full or partial rent payment by July 6 in its survey of 11.4 million units of professionally managed apartment units across the country.CR Note: It appears fewer people are paying their rent compared to last year (down 2.3 percentage points from a year ago). In the previous surveys, over the last few months, people were paying their rents at about the same pace as last year. The disaster relief has been key to helping people pay their bills, especially the extra unemployment benefits and the PPP.
This is a 2.3-percentage point decrease from the share who paid rent through July 6, 2019 and compares to 80.8 percent that had paid by June 6, 2020. These data encompass a wide variety of market-rate rental properties across the United States, which can vary by size, type and average rental price.
"It is clear that state and federal unemployment assistance benefits have served as a lifeline for renters, making it possible for them to pay their rent," said Doug Bibby, NMHC President. "Unfortunately, there is a looming July 31 deadline when that aid ends. Without an extension or a direct renter assistance program, that NMHC has been calling for since the start of the pandemic, the U.S. could be headed toward historic dislocations of renters and business failures among apartment firms, exacerbating both unemployment and homelessness."
emphasis added
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