Renters vs. Homeowners: Income and Liquid Asset Trends during COVID-19

Fiona Greig, Chen Zhao, Alexandra Lefevre
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

The COVID-19 recession hit the lowest-paid sectors of the economy the hardest, resulting in lower-income Americans losing their jobs and income at higher rates. Therefore, renters are more likely to have been impacted negatively by the economic shocks of the pandemic. While the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security (CARES) Act that passed in March 2020 provided one year of easily attainable mortgage forbearance for most homeowners, renters did not receive any form of federally-provided rent relief until the Coronavirus Response and Relief Supplemental Appropriations Act of 2021, which provided $25 billion in rental assistance through the Emergency Rental Assistance Program to cover current or past due balances. We examine income and savings patterns for renters and mortgages holders during the pandemic and ask: is there evidence that renters needed more assistance than they received? We find evidence that renters indeed needed more of a financial safety net than was available during the pandemic. The renters we analyze are much more affluent than typical renters and even among this population, they were more likely than mortgage holders to have lost their job and suffered large swings in their labor income, including large drops. Even with unusually generous UI benefits and stimulus checks, more than one in five renters experienced a greater than 10 percent drop in their total income. These income swings were more negative relative to the pre-COVID period. Finally, renters not only had lower incomes than mortgage holders, they also had much less of a savings buffer entering the pandemic. While more generous UI benefits and stimulus checks dramatically boosted their savings, they had depleted most of the additional savings by the end of the year, their position relative to mortgage holders did not improve significantly, and nearly one in four renters saw their savings decrease in 2020.
租房者与房主:2019冠状病毒病期间的收入和流动资产趋势
COVID-19经济衰退对经济中收入最低的部门的打击最为严重,导致低收入美国人以更高的速度失去工作和收入。因此,租房者更有可能受到疫情经济冲击的负面影响。虽然2020年3月通过的《冠状病毒援助、救济和经济安全(CARES)法案》为大多数房主提供了一年容易实现的抵押贷款减免,但直到2021年《冠状病毒应对和救济补充拨款法案》通过紧急租金援助计划提供了250亿美元的租金援助,以支付当前或过去到期的余额,租房者才获得任何形式的联邦政府提供的租金减免。我们研究了大流行期间租房者和抵押贷款持有人的收入和储蓄模式,并问道:是否有证据表明租房者需要的帮助比他们获得的更多?我们发现有证据表明,与大流行期间相比,租房者确实需要更多的金融安全网。我们分析的租房者比一般的租房者富裕得多,即使在这一人群中,他们也比抵押贷款持有人更有可能失业,劳动收入波动较大,包括大幅下降。即使有异乎寻常的慷慨的失业保险福利和刺激支票,超过五分之一的租房者的总收入下降了10%以上。与新冠疫情前相比,这些收入波动更为消极。最后,租房者不仅收入低于抵押贷款持有人,而且在大流行期间,他们的储蓄缓冲也少得多。虽然更慷慨的失业保险福利和刺激支票大大增加了他们的储蓄,但到年底,他们已经耗尽了大部分额外储蓄,他们相对于抵押贷款持有人的地位并没有显著改善,近四分之一的租房者在2020年看到他们的储蓄减少。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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