WASHINGTON, March 5 (Reuters) - The U.S. Treasury Department on Tuesday announced new steps to boost the supply of affordable housing by unlocking unspent COVID-19 aid funding to state and local governments to support a wider array of housing projects.
The initiatives are part of a Biden administration drive to address a key economic challenge facing Americans: lack of housing affordability. This is in turn contributing to inflation and negative voter sentiment on President Joe Biden's handling of the economy.
In the biggest of the moves, the Treasury said it would allow state and local governments to use unspent funds from the $350 billion State and Local Fiscal Recovery Fund to support housing projects serving families earning up to 120% of the area's median income, a big jump from 65% previously.
These funds can also now be spent on projects that meet terms of one of a dozen or more federal housing programs as well as those supported by government mortgage enterprises Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to house essential workers such as teachers, firefighters and nurses. This will open up a significantly wider array of housing projects eligible for support.
The amount of funding still available for such projects could be as high as about $40 billion, based on Reuters calculations. Treasury estimates that about 12% of the $350 billion in state and local funding from the 2021 American Rescue Plan Act has not yet been budgeted by states and the largest metropolitan areas, which received the lion's share of the funding.
In addition, the Treasury said that communities with unspent COVID-era Emergency Rental Assistance Program funds can divert them to supporting "pre-development" and land acquisition costs for low-income affordable housing projects, in addition to construction and rehabilitation costs allowed previously.
As of June 30, 2023, the most recent data available, about $6.9 billion was left in the original $46 billion rental assistance program started by the Trump administration and expanded under Biden to combat homelessness during the pandemic.
Home prices are set to rise further in coming years as homeowners with low mortgage rates stay put, according to property experts. Increasing housing supply has proven difficult amid high interest rates.
"The lack of supply is helping to drive up housing costs for American families," U.S. Deputy Treasury Secretary Wally Adeyemo said in a blog post. "These rising housing costs are not only concentrated in coastal cities, but they are also felt in cities in the heartland, in rural areas, and suburbs across the country."
(This story has been officially corrected by the U.S. Treasury to say 'obligated', not 'budgeted', in reference to state and local aid funds remaining, in paragraph 5)
Reporting by David Lawder; Editing by Andrea Ricci