Volume 19, Issue 4
Volume 19, Issue 3
Volume 19, Issue 2
Volume 19, Issue 1
Volume 18, Issue 4
Volume 18, Issue 3
Volume 18, Issue 2
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
Volume 16, Issues 3 and 4
Volume 16, Issue 2
Volume 16, Issue 1
Volume 15, Issue 4
Volume 15, Issue 3
Volume 15, Issue 2
Volume 15, Issue 1
Volume 14, Issue 4
Volume 14, Issue 3
Volume 14, Issues 1 and 2
Volume 13, Issue 4
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Volume 13, Issue 1
Volume 12, Issue 4
Volume 12, Issue 3
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Volume 11, Issue 1
Volume 10, Issue 4
Volume 10, Issue 3
Volume 10, Issue 2
Volume 10, Issue 1
Volume 9, Issue 4
Volume 9, Issue 3
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Volume 9, Issue 1
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Volume 8, Issue 1
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Volume 7, Issue 1
Volume 6, Issue 4
Volume 6, Issue 3
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Volume 5, Issue 4
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Volume 4, Issue 4
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Volume 4, Issue 1
Volume 3, Issue 4
Volume 3, Issue 3
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Volume 2, Issue 4
Volume 2, Issue 3
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Volume 2 Issue 1
Volume 1, Issue 1

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Comment: Rengert
Volume 17, Issue 3
2006
 
Kristopher M. Rengert
 
McClure provides a useful and interesting analysis of how the Low-Income
Housing Tax Credit (LIHTC) program, the primary federal vehicle supporting
the creation of new affordable housing for very low income families, has
evolved over its first 20 years. He finds that it has grown more financially efficient
and that it places an increasing share of its units in suburban and lowpoverty
census tracts.

I examine the same LIHTC activity, but aggregated to the state rather than
the national level. I identify and discuss differences among states with regard
to how well they use the LIHTC program to support affordable housing in
suburban and low-poverty census tracts. I advocate for more detailed research
into the underlying factors and administrative practices that lead to this variation,
as well as for the creation of a clearinghouse on best practices to help
states learn from one another.
 
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