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COVID-19’s housing crisis hit many Asians in the US hardest – but only after government aid began flowing [theconversation.com]

 

By Kusum Mundra and Ruth Uwaifu Oyelere, Photo: Mary Altaffer/Associated Press, The Conversation, March 2, 2023

The big idea

People of Asian descent living in the U.S. experienced an increase in housing vulnerability in 2021 – as measured by the share who said they had fallen behind on their rent or mortgage payments – even as the government spent over US$5 trillion trying to relieve the COVID-19 pandemic’s burden on Americans. Meanwhile, housing vulnerability among white people, Black people and Hispanic people all fell during this period.

These are the main findings of our recent working paper that examined housing vulnerability during the pandemic.

The massive upheaval sparked by the pandemic in early 2020 put millions out of work and made it harder for many people to afford basic necessities like rent amid government-imposed lockdowns. In December 2020, over 2 million homeowners were more than three months behind on their mortgage payment, and 8 million renters were behind on their rent, according to a March 2021 Consumer Finance Bureau report.

[Please click here to read more.]

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