Community-Wealth.org Join our community...
 
 
 
C-W Blog

Guest blogger Bob Zdenek discusses shared equity

This is the first in what we hope will be a series of guest blogger columns.  If you represent a community wealth building organization and would like to participate in our C-W.org Blog forum, please e-mail us at: info (at) community-wealth.org.

Shared Equity: A Balancing Act Between Individual Asset Building and Permanent Affordability and Retention
by Robert O. Zdenek, DPA, Interim Executive Director National Housing Institute and Principal, Robert Zdenek Associates

The National Housing Institute (NHI) published a significant new study on Shared Equity Homeownership by John Emmeus Davis of Burlington Associates, a community development consulting group with a focus on providing technical assistance for community land trusts.  This was the first study that brought together to the practice and policies of limited equity coops; deed-restricted housing; and community land trusts under the umbrella of shared equity homeownership, a term that John Davis coined. 

The underlying premise of shared equity homeownership is to provide permanent affordable housing opportunities through subsidy retention for millions of low and moderate income families.  The shared equity models (deed-restricted housing; limited equity coops; and community land trusts) preserve and retain the public subsidy dollars to maintain the affordability of the housing for future generations.

While the shared equity model provides critical affordability opportunities for families, many low and moderate income families want to be first-time homeowners and benefit from the asset building opportunities that homeownership usually provides over the long term.  There has been growing asset inequality in the U.S. over the past 25 years and study after study demonstrates that many low-income families, especially families of color and single- breadwinner households, have negative assets.  First-time homeownership for families of limited income when coupled with financial education, credit counseling, and secure financing provides excellent opportunities for families to increase both their assets and economic stability.  Many homeownership practitioners and advocates do not want their appreciation capped, even though public subsidy sources are essential to downpayment assistance for new homebuyers.

But asset building/accumulation and permanent affordability with shared equity homeownership does not have to be an either/or scenario.  Low-income families can gain assets while properties affordability can be maintained.  Rick Jacobus and Jeffrey Lubbell in a recent paper presented at a shared equity homeownership symposium in Portland Oregon sponsored by NeighborWorks America and NCB Capital Impact raised the idea of “shared appreciation loans” as an interesting new strategy.. 

Shared appreciation loans allow the locality to capture a portion of home price appreciation (20 to 25%) at the time the assisted units are sold which can be used to help subsequent buyers purchase homes. The key point is to be flexible in offering products and tools that facilitate both asset building and preserve affordability and reuse of public subsidies.  Another example is that of Manna, Inc., a large community development corporation in Washington D.C., has helped over 1000 low-income individuals and families become homeowners and benefit from the appreciation in homeownership.  One of Manna’s recent initiatives, Syphax Village, provided homeownership opportunities to low income families several blocks from the new Washington Nationals Baseball stadium. The appreciation in the neighborhood was so significant that Manna placed a restriction that any new homeowner that sold their unit within the first five years paid Manna a portion of the appreciation, since Manna’s goal is to promote long-term homeownership and asset building.

Hopefully, there will be other models and tools developed that encourage both asset appreciation coupled with preservation of scarce public subsidies over the long horizon.  We need both individual asset building and community wealth to create healthy environments that benefit all of us. 

Posted by Steve Dubb on 02/27/2008 at 02:09 PM
No current comments.
Commenting is not available in this weblog entry.

« Back to main

 
Last Five Blog Entries

Buffalo hosts deconstruction conference

Data confirm community lending works

HUD unveils stabilization program details

Good Jobs First is hiring

Community land trust gains international acclaim


Subscribe via RSS
Subscribe via Email

C-W Related Blogs

CEOs for Cities

Clawback (Good Jobs First)

Equity (Policy Link)

Employee Ownership
(ESOP Association)

Greenbiz

Inclusionist (Mobility Agenda)

Ideas in Development
(Bill Schweke/CFED)

The Ladder
(New America Foundation)

NCRC (National Community Reinvestment Coalition)

Nonprofit Issues-Advocacy Blog (OMB Watch)

On the Commons

Rick Jacobus, Community Revitalization Consultant

Rural Blog

Smart Growth America

Social Edge blogs

Social Enterprise Reporter

Social Economy Centre (Canada)

Stanford Social Enterprise Review


Categories

Breaking News
C-W Activities
Models & Best Practices
Policy Innovations
Studies & Reports
Show All


Archives

October 2008
September 2008
July 2008
June 2008
May 2008
April 2008
March 2008
February 2008
January 2008
November 2007
October 2007
September 2007
August 2007
July 2007
June 2007
May 2007
April 2007
Complete Archives
Category Archives

 
 
   Home  \  About C-W  \  Strategies & Models  \  News & Events  \  Articles & Publications  \  C-W Blog  \  Contact Us  \  Site Map