Skip to main content
logo

2023 Annual Conference

May 16–18, 2023

Palace Station Hotel & Casino, Las Vegas, NV, US

IMPORTANT NOTICE: The date, time, and room assignment of YOUR presentation is SUBJECT TO CHANGE.

Proposal authors can use this tool to see where they have been placed in the program agenda for an Oral or Poster Session.

Scroll down to search by the Submitter or Author Name, by Date/Time, or by Keywords.

Confirm your place in the schedule by following the instructionss that were emailed to you. Each presentation must have a separate paid registration. Contact the ACCI office immedicately by email at admin@consumerinterests.org to report any conflict, all corrections to the details of the presentation (including author names and the order they are listed as this is how it will be in the final program), or if you have any questions. Please be sure to reference the session title(s), date(s), and time(s) when you contact us.

H3a Family Composition and Housing Expenditures: Who has an Unaffordable Housing Cost Burden?

Thursday, May 18, 2023 at 1:00 PM–2:30 PM PDT
Room 3
Short Description

As high housing costs continue to be top of mind for many Americans, this study uses the 2019 Survey of Consumer Finances to examine how family life cycles, demographics, financial literacy, and financial attitudes and behaviors interact with household spending on housing as compared to their income (housing cost burden). Affordability is measured with two different thresholds. First, the study imposes the commonly cited Department of Housing and Urban Development ratio for affordability, which defines affordable housing as less than 30 percent of one’s income. Additionally, housing cost burden is measured by three categories — affordable, high, and excessive. The binary logistic regression and multinomial logistic regression results indicate that renters, single females with and without children, and single males without children were more likely to have an unaffordable housing cost burden when compared to homeowners or married couples without children. Single households typically only have one source of income, and single mothers share many of the same expenses that couples with children have but with potentially fewer resources to fulfill those expenses. The analysis indicates that encouraging homeownership goals, intentional saving behavior, and strong credit management skills may help alleviate this cost burden.

Type of presentation

Accepted Oral Presentation

Submitter

Ashlyn Rollins-Koons, Kansas State Univeristy

Authors

Ashlyn Rollins-Koons, Kansas State Univeristy
HanNa Lim, Kansas State University
Stuart Heckman, Kansas State University
Loading…