81. COVID-19 Relief Measures had Few Durable Post-Pandemic Effects on Renters
- Author:
- Benjamin Mark Reicher and Michael Kuehlwein
- Publication Date:
- 01-2026
- Content Type:
- Journal Article
- Journal:
- California Journal of Politics and Policy
- Institution:
- Berkeley APEC Study Center
- Abstract:
- The COVID-19 pandemic was responsible for an unprecedented crisis in the rental housing market, as families faced eviction as a consequence of pandemic lockdowns and resulting economic recession. In response, for the first time ever in US history, eviction moratoria were introduced to protect renters from being evicted for nonpayment; these were accompanied by several stimulus measures to support renters and the overall economy. This study asks whether these pandemic-era policies had any lingering effects after they had ceased to be implemented, by examining whether renters’ housing vulnerability at the state level saw any improvement in the post-pandemic years of 2022-23. For comparison, the study also evaluates the effects of variables reflecting economic fundamentals and renters’ housing burden. The findings suggest that the included policies had little effect on renters’ post-pandemic housing precarity.
- Topic:
- Economics, Public Policy, Eviction, COVID-19, Housing, Rent, and Housing Market
- Political Geography:
- North America and United States of America