From xxxxxx <[email protected]>
Subject Half of N.Y.C. Households Can’t Afford To Live Here, Report Finds
Date April 28, 2023 2:00 AM
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[ The study is the latest piece of evidence to demonstrate the
depth of New York City’s affordability crisis, which is reshaping
local demographics and culture.]
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HALF OF N.Y.C. HOUSEHOLDS CAN’T AFFORD TO LIVE HERE, REPORT FINDS
 
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Eliza Shapiro
April 25, 2023
New York Times
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_ The study is the latest piece of evidence to demonstrate the depth
of New York City’s affordability crisis, which is reshaping local
demographics and culture. _

The No. 4 train approaching a subway station in the Bronx. Residents
of the central Bronx in particular were struggling to keep up with the
cost of living in New York City., Photo: Desiree Rios for The New York
Times

 

New York City is staring down the worst affordability crisis of the
last two decades, according to a new report released on Tuesday
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households did not have enough money to comfortably hold down an
apartment, access sufficient food and basic health care, and get
around, the report said.

The study is the latest piece of evidence to demonstrate the depth of
the crisis, which is reshaping local demographics and culture in real
time.

Public officials have been particularly alarmed by a significant drop
in public school enrollment
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which accelerated during the worst of the pandemic and is driven in
part by Black families leaving the city
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concerns about the cost of living. Mayor Eric Adams and Gov. Kathy
Hochul have both made tackling the lack of affordability a priority,
but it is unclear whether they will be able to make meaningful
changes, particularly around housing.

The city is experiencing an acute shortage of affordable housing, an
enormous problem that shows few signs of abating. Ms. Hochul’s push
to build more housing across the state appears to have failed
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recent state budget negotiations. Nearly 80 percent of households that
did not bring in enough to meet the minimum cost of living in the city
ended up contributing more than 30 percent of their income to housing,
the study found.

At the same time, food prices
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risen steadily amid stubborn inflation, and public transportation
officials have warned of looming fare hikes.

The report was released Tuesday by the Fund for the City of New York,
which advises government agencies and was established by the Ford
Foundation in 1968, and the United Way of New York City. The
reports’ authors used U.S. Census data from 2021 along with a
measure that calculates the baseline for affordability for New York
City families.

The study found that New Yorkers are even worse off than after the
nadir of the pandemic. The groups’ 2021 report
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city households could not keep up with the cost of living at the time,
a figure that has since risen. The findings in this year’s report
may partially reflect the challenges that low-income New Yorkers have
faced when pandemic-era safety net programs
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stimulus checks and child tax credits expired.

The percentage of households struggling to afford basic needs in the
city was higher than any other year in the report’s two-decade
history of studying the cost of living. Households in all five
boroughs needed to be pulling in at least $100,000 to afford housing,
food and transportation, and to have a shot at being able to plan for
the future, the study found. In southern Manhattan, home to some of
the most expensive ZIP codes in the country, families with two adults
and two children needed to make at least $150,000 combined.

The actual median household income in the city was hovering around
$70,000, according to the most recent Census data.

New York City has long been unaffordable for its most vulnerable
residents, including those without college degrees or people who are
unable to work. But the report shows that a considerable majority of
households that could not keep up with the cost of living — 80
percent — had at least one working adult, and more than half of New
Yorkers who could not make ends meet had a college degree or some
college credit, if not a graduate degree.

“People are doing everything they were told to do,” said Lisette
Nieves, president of the Fund for the City of New York, but they still
cannot afford to live here. “I feel like we’re representing a
broken contract with people,” she added, noting that many working
families end up in homeless shelters.

Among working New Yorkers, home health aides were most likely to have
incomes that could not cover the basics, according to the study.
Health aides account for one of the fastest-growing industries
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New York City, but typically pull in very low salaries; the median
wage for health aides was just over $15 an hour, the study found.
Recent research has shown that the city is facing a massive shortage
of home health aides, which will worsen significantly over the next
few years.

Janitors, cashiers and teaching assistants were also likely to not be
able to afford essentials.

The affordability crisis is particularly urgent for nonwhite New
Yorkers, the study found. Latino, Black and immigrant New Yorkers were
bearing the brunt of the affordability crisis, and residents of the
central Bronx had the highest rates of economic instability.

And more than 85 percent of households where single mothers were
taking care of young children were unable to keep up with the cost of
living.

_[ELIZA SHAPIRO is a reporter on the Metro desk.]_

* capitalism
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* poverty
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* economic inequality
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* Affordability crisis
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* inflation
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* unemployment
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* Housing
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* high rents
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* cost of living
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* New York City
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* starvation
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* Racism
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