Research has shown that persistent gaps in economic opportunity for some populations is in part a result of disparities in the health of neighborhoods. These gaps in neighborhood health are partially the result of long-term differences in the level of investment made in those neighborhoods, including their housing stock, and the people living in them. To help achieve its maximum employment objective, the Federal Reserve conducts research and analysis on the causes and consequences of these neighborhood investment and outcome disparities, as well as solutions to overcome them, and brings together local, state, and national partners to better understand and act on the information generated.

 

Related Information

Confronting Rental Affordability Shortages in the Rural Southeast
December 13, 2018

Fed Research Looks at the Southeast's Affordable Housing Squeeze
December 7, 2018

Rural Affordable Rental Housing: Quantifying Need, Reviewing Recent Federal Support, and Assessing the Use of Low Income Housing Tax Credits in Rural Areas (PDF)
July 19, 2018

Renters Feel the Squeeze, While Homeowners Enjoy Relative Affordability
Summer 2018

Preserving Affordable Rural Rental Housing: New Tools and Promising Practices
May 4, 2017

The Future of Rural Communities: Implications for Housing
May 10, 2016

 

Speeches

Chair Jerome H. Powell
December 6, 2018
Welcoming Remarks At the Housing Assistance Council's 2018 Rural Housing Conference, Washington, D.C.

Governor Lael Brainard
May 18, 2018
Keeping Community at the Heart of the Community Reinvestment Act

Governor Lael Brainard
May 22, 2017
Why Opportunity and Inclusion Matter to America's Economic Strength

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Last Update: June 10, 2019