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Five Housing Scenarios That Promote Upward Mobility

A report from the Urban Institute suggests policymakers and housing advocates should aim to not only prevent evictions, foreclosures, and homelessness, but also should put safeguards in place to better protect people from the next housing crisis and, authors say, "bolster resilience in their path to upward mobility."

"People will emerge from this economic recession deeply scathed: way below and way behind where they were before the pandemic," wrote research assistant Elizabeth Champion and research associate Megan Gallager, who authored the paper. "We should put safeguards in place now to better protect people from the next housing crisis and bolster resilience in their path to upward mobility. And temporary financial support is not enough. For households to advance beyond the inequitable, pre-pandemic status quo, policymakers and practitioners should create housing recovery strategies that advance holistic upward mobility."

Below are the five "housing outcomes," as determined by the researchers, " beyond  supporting housing affordability and stability, that, as a "bundle," have the power to advance a households' upward mobility. These items, they say, represent a pivot "from an emergency response to a housing recovery that advances holistic mobility from poverty."

"Many federal, state, and local policies and programs are intended to support homeownership and home equity," they wrote, "and certain demonstrations and evaluations, like the MicroMortgage Marketplace,  [2]seek to expand lending and increase sustainable homeownership for low- and moderate-income households in low-cost markets across the country."

"Together, a neighborhood’s set of resources, opportunities, and characteristics can either boost or inhibit upward mobility for residents," the researchers noted. "Deconcentrating and declustering lower-cost housing [3] could expand neighborhood choices for very low–income people and their ability to move to high-opportunity neighborhoods."

The entire study and methodology can be accessed at urban.org/urbanwire [4].