The blog of the Urban Institute
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Summary
To advance racial equity, policymakers should consider how income tax policies and practices can exacerbate racial disparities in wealth and income.
Why Are Fewer Young People Buying Homes When They Leave Their Parents’ Place? As the affordable housing crisis worsens, policymakers looking to support young homebuyers could offer tax credits for first-time homebuyers and reform zoning laws to allow for increased density.Rural Communities of Color Are Overrepresented among Community Disaster Resilience Zones Many rural areas designated as community disaster resilience zones are also more likely to be home to people of color, meaning federal agencies will need to tailor funding and assistance to avoid exacerbating racial and geographic inequities.Equitable Climate Migration Planning Requires New Evidence and Investments Three things climate migration researchers, planners, and funders need to know to meet climate migrants’ diverse needs and prepare communities to receive them.Lessons from the American Rescue Plan Act to Inform the Proposed $20 Billion Innovation Fund for Housing Expansion To address the affordable housing shortage, policymakers should consider creating more flexible funding oppportunities that allow localities to easily address their communities’ specific housing needs.No Single Policy Will Increase Housing Affordability. We Need a Comprehensive Strategy. We need both changes in local land-use policy and increases in subsidies for low-income renters to respond to varying housing market conditions.The State of Data Disaggregation for Asian American, Native Hawaiian, and Pacific Islander Groups Recent federal efforts to disaggregate Asian American, Native Hawaiian, and Pacific Islander data have led to a better understanding of inequities, but data gaps persist.