America’s Affordable Housing Problem

How America got to be so unaffordable, and what we can do to make it more affordable; An analysis of good-in-theory v. outcome based policies

Coby Lefkowitz
56 min readAug 17, 2022
Homeless Encampment overlooking Downtown LA. Source: Richard Vogel, AP

America has been struggling through a crippling housing crisis for much of the last decade. Many may intuitively feel this, but the data is even starker than emotions suggest.

Nearly half of all renters, amounting to 20 million households, are burdened by housing costs. 10 million renters are severely burdened, spending more than half of their gross income on housing. It’s not much better for home owners. The average national price to income ratio is 5.4, but far higher in the least affordable metro areas. San Fransisco, that bastion of unaffordability, had a price-to-income ratio of 9.6 as of 2020, where median home prices and incomes were $1.15M, and $120k, respectively. Of course, this is a very high salary. For most working class families, after high state & city taxes, expense of raising kids, and general cost of living are factored in — without even considering the ability to enjoy one’s self every now and then — it could take well more than 25 years to afford the median home. More likely, working class, and increasingly middle class, families will never be able to afford a home in San Francisco. Most end up moving to…

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Coby Lefkowitz

Urbanist, Developer, Writer, & Optimist working to create more beautiful, sustainable, healthy, equitable and people-oriented places.