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The Low-Income Housing Tax Credit Program Goes Mainstream and Moves to the Suburbs
Comment: Freeman
Comment: Varady
Comment: Rengert
Emerging Cohort Trends in Housing Debt and Home Equity
Philadelphia's Neighborhood Transformation Initiative: A Case Study of Mayoral Leadership, Bold Planning, and Conflict
Property Taxes and Residents' Housing Choices: A Case Study of Middlesex County, New Jersey
Assessing Residents' Opinions on Changes in a Gentrifying Neighbood: A Case Study of the Alberta Neighborhod in Portland, Oregon
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The Low-Income Housing Tax Credit Program Goes Mainstream and Moves to the Suburbs
Volume 17, Issue 3
2006
 
Kirk McClure
 
The Low-Income Housing Tax Credit (LIHTC) program is now 20 years
old. With the maturing of the program, the use of tax credits has become
commonplace in the development of rental housing across the nation. This
article examines how the program has changed both financially and spatially.
Specifically, the article asks whether it provides a mechanism that can help
deconcentrate impoverished renters by providing access to low-poverty
neighborhoods.

This research finds that as the price for tax credits rises, the program
becomes increasingly popular with developers who are helping it make inroads
in low-poverty suburbs. By entering the suburbs, the LIHTC program is meeting
and even exceeding the performance of the Housing Choice Voucher
Program in terms of offering opportunities to live in low-poverty settings.
 
 
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