Latest news with #StateoftheNation'sHousing2025


USA Today
24-06-2025
- Business
- USA Today
The Daily Money: Where's the beef? At McDonald's.
Good morning! It's Daniel de Visé with your Daily Money. Where's the beef? This week, at McDonald's. A boycott targeting the fast-food chain, slated to begin today, is the latest in a series of consumer actions from the grassroots advocacy group The People's Union USA. Here's more on the boycott and its goals. The rising challenge of finding affordable homes A new report from one of the nation's premier housing research groups confirms what many of us already know: Residential real estate is pulling further away from ordinary Americans, becoming more expensive, less attainable, and increasingly stymying efforts to make a market that works for everyone. The State of the Nation's Housing 2025, from the Joint Center for Housing Studies of Harvard University, lays out the numbers in stark detail. Health insurers take aim at prior authorizations Large health insurance companies have vowed to reform a common tool they use to vet requests before letting doctors bill for medical services or prescriptions. UnitedHealthcare, Blue Cross Blue Shield, Cigna, Kaiser Permanente, Humana and other health insurance companies on June 23 announced plans to "streamline, simplify and reduce prior authorizations." Here's how prior authorizations work, and what's changing. 📰 More stories you shouldn't miss 📰 About The Daily Money Each weekday, The Daily Money delivers the best consumer and financial news from USA TODAY, breaking down complex events, providing the TLDR version, and explaining how everything from Fed rate changes to bankruptcies impacts you. Daniel de Visé covers personal finance for USA Today.


USA Today
24-06-2025
- Business
- USA Today
America's housing is pulling further out of reach, report finds
Harvard researchers document the increasing costs and challenges of finding housing for both renters and owners A new report from one of the nation's premiere housing research groups confirms what many of us already know: residential real estate is pulling further away from ordinary Americans, becoming more expensive, less attainable, and increasingly stymying efforts to make a market that works for everyone. The State of the Nation's Housing 2025, from the Joint Center for Housing Studies of Harvard University, lays out the numbers in stark detail. What those numbers actually look like can be seen in the charts below. Do young people complain too much about the high cost of housing? Americans have always stretched to buy their homes, and many older people remember when mortgage rates were in the double digits. But by one measure, conditions have rarely been this challenging. The median-priced home was five times greater than the median household income in 2024, according to the report, 'significantly' above the ratio of three times, which has traditionally been a rough rule of thumb about what's affordable. Going back to 1990, the only other period in which the ratio was this high was 2005, at the height of the subprime bubble. More: OK, boomer: Why older Americans have the upper hand in the housing market Of course, one of the oldest truths about housing is that all real estate is local. Even now, there are plenty of places where dollars stretch further. Consider: a borrower would need an income of $595,389 to afford the median-priced home in the San Jose, California metro area, which is just over $2 million. But you could pick up a typical home in Waterloo-Cedar Falls, Iowa, or Charleston, West Virginia, for one-tenth that amount. Read more: Rents remain far above pre-COVID levels. Use this tool to check prices in your area Finally, it's worth remembering that it's not just homes for purchase that are pulling out of reach. The rent is still too darn high for far too many Americans. There are some policies that may help alleviate high costs, Whitney Airgood-Obrycki, a senior research associate at the Harvard Joint Center for Housing Studies, told USA TODAY. Zoning tends to be the first point of friction. Allowing multifamily housing in places that are zoned for single family only can ease that. But the reform needs to go beyond that change. "We can make building as easy as possible," Airgood-Obrycki said, "but for people at the bottom of the market who are severely rent burdened and have been over time, new construction really isn't going to solve their problem." Read next: Homeowners have nearly 40x the wealth of renters. But what's causing the wealth gap? That is where federal and state subsidies, in the form of vouchers and public housing, can be helpful, Airgood-Obrycki added. The Harvard report reminds readers that 'cost burdens' have a human toll: in January 2024, 771,480 people were homeless, up a whopping 33% since January 2020.