Renting: The new American Dream?

Bob Sullivan | Credit.com

Is renting a home the new American dream? A report by the Urban Institute projects that even after the housing crash and the Great Recession are a distant memory, homeownership rates in America will continue to decline.

The report estimates that between 2010 and 2030, the majority (59%) of the 22 million new households that will form will rent, while just 41% will buy their homes.

The homeownership rate has been falling since 2006, when the housing bubble began pricing out many would-be homeowners — and the recession furthered that trend. In 2006, the homeownership rate was 67.3%; it now sits at 63.6%, even lower than it was in 1990, according the U.S. Census' most recent American Community Survey.

But even the economic recovery won't reverse that trend, according to the Urban Institute. It offers six reasons:

■ Wages. Real wages have declined among adults ages 25 to 34 since 1996. "Even for young adults with good jobs, low vacancy rates and high rents make it more difficult to save," the report says.

■ Student loan debt. Total outstanding debt was about $300 billion in 2003; now it is over $1.3 trillion. Long-term debt makes additional long-term debt less appealing.

■ Delayed household formation. Both women and men are waiting four years longer before marriage than in 1980. "Because of the delayed marriage and childbearing, homeownership is apt to occur later. At a result, people will spend less of their lives as homeowners, placing a drag on the homeownership rate," according to the Urban Institute.

■ Lingering effects of the recession. Roughly 7.5 million Americans lost their homes during the recession; most will have a hard time buying a new one, dragging down the homeownership rate.

■ They're not that into homebuying. More Americans are consciously choosing to rent over buy. One study looked at "prime candidates" -- married couples earning at least $95,000 annually who have at least one child. "Even for this group, after controlling for race and ethnicity, the homeownership rate declined from 87.3% in 2000 to 80.6% in 2012," the report says.

■ Higher borrowing standards. The report says that lenders are still "historically tight," particularly among borrowers with lower credit scores. (You can check your credit scores for free on Credit.com to see where you stand.)

The report also considered changing demographics — a majority of new households formed in the U.S. during the next two decades will be non-white — and while those groups traditionally have lower homeownership rates, the Urban Institute found that will not contribute significantly to overall homeownership rates in the future. That story is a mixed bag, however.

"For at least the next 15 years, whether the economy grows slowly or quickly, the homeownership rate for African Americans will decrease while the rate for Hispanics will increase," the report found. "More than 50 percent of the 9 million new owners between 2010 and 2030 will be Hispanic, nearly one-third will be other races or ethnicities, 11 percent will be African American, and only 7 percent will be white."

The shift from owning to renting means that many more rental units should be built, the Urban Institute says.

"This change will create a surge in rental demand from now until 2030 that we are unprepared to meet," it says.

It also suggests that mortgage lending standards be relaxed to nudge more would-be renters to buy their homes.

That conclusion doesn't sit well with everyone, however.

Logan Mohtashami, a California-based loan officer, says the notion that lending standards are tight is a myth.

"There remain a number of highly respected housing 'gurus' who continue to profess that it is unfairly tight lending standards, not the lack of qualified buyers that are suppressing a housing recovery. The difference is not academic," he says. "A quick review of the requirements for some of mortgage loans available may surprise you."

VA loans require no down payment, for example, he notes. And buyers can get other mortgages with credit scores as low as 560, with 50% debt-to-income ratios, or down payments as low as 3%.

"At this point all you can do is bring back 0% down loans and stated income loans for wage earners," said. "Look who is really pushing the tight lending thesis. People in New York, D.C., San Francisco. What I call economic bubble cities. Main Street America gets this thesis I am saying."

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