Volume 19, Issue 4
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Volume 18, Issue 4
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Volume 18, Issue 1
Volume 17, Issue 4
Volume 17, Issue 3
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
Volume 17, Issue 2
Volume 17, Issue 1
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Comment: Varady
Volume 17, Issue 3
2006
 
David P. Varady
 
The news that the Low-Income Housing Tax Credit (LIHTC) program has
gone mainstream and moved to the suburbs is to be welcomed, but we should
not have unrealistic expectations. The program is likely to lead to only a
limited amount of income mixing in the surrounding area. These developments
work against social mixing since so many of the residents have low incomes.
Also, it would be a mistake to view the program as a substitute for the Housing
Choice Voucher Program because it outperforms the latter as a device for
deconcentrating poverty in the nation as a whole.

In places like Alameda County, CA, voucher recipients have been suburbanizing
in large numbers, and this model needs to be replicated. Finally,
suburban LIHTC developments will achieve their full potential only if community
groups are involved early in the application process and if tenants are carefully
screened and rules are strictly enforced.
 
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