2026-03-11 / 路透社
作者:理查德·考恩
2026年3月11日 美国东部时间上午10:07 更新于53分钟前

(路透社/迈克·布莱克 版权许可,新标签页打开)
- 摘要
- 国会在11月选举前出现罕见两党合作
- 支持者称立法将推动经济适用房建设
- 自2019年以来房价上涨60%
华盛顿,3月11日(路透社) – 美国国会参众两院议员正支持一项鼓励建设更多经济适用房的法案,这是在选民生活质量问题上罕见的两党合作案例。
该法案获得了行业团体的广泛支持,将全面改革监管制度,以加快新建住房速度并降低建设成本。它还将使工厂预制房屋规则现代化,并禁止大型投资集团收购更多独栋住宅——这一措施得到了总统唐纳德·特朗普的支持。
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在共和党人和民主党人就特朗普的移民打击和伊朗战争激烈争执之际,议员们却围绕经济适用房努力团结起来。由南卡罗来纳州共和党参议员蒂姆·斯科特和马萨诸塞州民主党参议员伊丽莎白·沃伦牵头的最新版本周二以89-9的投票结果在参议院通过程序性障碍,预计未来几天将正式通过。
众议院以类似票数通过了其版本,参众两院将需要解决分歧,才能让特朗普签署成法。
议员们希望在2026年11月中期选举(将决定国会控制权)前向选民展示他们正在解决这一问题。
经济适用房的争论涵盖了从鸡蛋价格到儿童保育的方方面面,但没有什么比住房在家庭预算中所占比例更大。
经济学家表示,2008年金融危机后多年建设不足,美国目前短缺约400万套住房,而地方分区法规常常使得在发达地区难以建设。
新冠疫情期间的供应链中断推高了建筑材料成本,随后利率大幅上升也推高了抵押贷款成本。
哈佛大学住房联合研究中心的数据显示,自2019年以来房价上涨60%,2024年独栋住宅中位数价格达到家庭收入中位数的5倍——远高于普遍认为的可负担比例。
限制企业购房
该法案将简化联邦环境评估流程,便于将空置建筑改造为公寓。它还将扩大经济适用房融资,并提高联邦支持的多户住宅抵押贷款保险项目的贷款限额。
全国房地产经纪人协会和美国城市联盟等民间团体支持该法案。
拥有超过350套独栋住宅的公司将被禁止收购更多,以防止它们击败个人买家。
即使法案支持者也承认它无法解决根本问题。沃伦称其”在约束企业房东方面迈出了良好第一步”,而自由意志主义加图研究所的诺伯特·米歇尔则表示,这主要是调整现有政策,试图向选民展示议员们正在采取行动。
“这是一个政治噱头,声称他们在解决住房问题,”他说。
报道:理查德·考恩;编辑:安迪·沙利文和丽莎·舒梅克
我们的标准:汤森路透信托原则,[新标签页打开]
US lawmakers advance bill to lower housing prices
2026-03-11 / Reuters
By Richard Cowan
March 11, 2026 10:07 AM UTC Updated 53 mins ago
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A construction worker is shown at work on a multi-unit residential housing project in Encinitas, California, U.S., July 28, 2025. REUTERS/Mike Blake Purchase Licensing Rights, opens new tab
- Summary
- Rare bipartisanship in Congress before November elections
- Supporters say legislation will spur affordable home building
- Housing costs have risen 60% since 2019
WASHINGTON, March 11 (Reuters) – Republicans and Democrats in Congress are lining up behind legislation to encourage more affordable housing, in a rare example of bipartisan action on a quality-of-life issue for voters.
The bill, which has drawn broad support from industry groups, would overhaul regulations to make it faster and cheaper to build new housing. It would also modernize rules for factory-built housing and ban large investment groups from buying more single-family homes, a measure backed by President Donald Trump.
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At a time when Republicans and Democrats are fighting bitterly over Trump’s immigration crackdown and the war in Iran, lawmakers have rallied around the affordable-housing effort. The latest version, led by Republican Senator Tim Scott of South Carolina and Democratic Senator Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts, cleared a procedural hurdle in the Senate on Tuesday by an 89-9 vote. Passage is expected in coming days.
The House of Representatives passed its own version by a similar margin, and the two chambers will have to resolve their differences before Trump can sign it into law.
Lawmakers are eager to show voters they are tackling the issue ahead of the November 2026 midterm elections, which will determine control of Congress.
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The affordability debate has encompassed everything from the cost of eggs to child care, but few items account for a larger share of household budgets than housing.
Economists say the U.S. has a shortage of roughly 4 million homes after years of underbuilding following the 2008 financial crisis, while local zoning rules often make it difficult to build in developed areas.
Supply-chain disruptions during the COVID-19 pandemic drove building-material costs higher as well, while the sharp increase in interest rates that followed also pushed up mortgage costs.
Home prices have risen 60% since 2019, according to Harvard University’s Joint Center for Housing Studies, and the median price of a single-family home in 2024 reached five times the median household income — well above the ratio widely considered to be affordable.
CURBING CORPORATE HOME PURCHASES
The legislation would streamline federal environmental reviews for construction projects and make it easier to convert vacant buildings into apartments.
It also would expand financing for affordable housing and increase loan limits for federally backed mortgage insurance programs for multifamily homes.
The National Association of Realtors and civic groups like the National League of Cities support the bill.
Companies that own more than 350 single-family homes would be prohibited from buying more, in an effort to prevent them from outbidding individual buyers.
Even the bill’s champions say it will not fix the problem. Warren said it “takes a good first step” to rein in corporate landlords, while Norbert Michel of the libertarian Cato Institute said it mainly tweaks existing policy in an attempt to show voters that lawmakers are taking action.
“It’s a political ploy to say they are doing something about housing,” he said.
Reporting by Richard Cowan; Editing by Andy Sullivan and Lisa Shumaker
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