Rural housing : trends and prospects
Title
Rural housing : trends and prospects
Subject
rural housing
Description
"The quality of rural housing has improved markedly since World War II; from 38 percent standard in 1950 to 67 percent in 1960 and nearly 80 percent in 1968. Rural housing has shared in the general upgrading of housing which resulted from the postwar building boom. New construction and renovation has exceeded new household formations by a wide enough margin to permit a general shifting up and abandonment or demolition of the poorest units. Rural America however, still had higher percentages of substandard housing than did urban areas in 1968: 17.1 percent of nonmetropolitan housing was substandard compared, with 5.7 percent in the central cities of the SMSA's and 4.0 percent outside the central cities of the SMSA's. The substandard rural housing is heavily concentrated in the southeastern States. The analysis emphasizes rural aspects of the private sector construction industry, mobile homes, the financing of housing, government programs, and projections."
Creator
Freeman, Robert E.
Publisher
U.S. Department of Agriculture. Economic Research Service. Economic Development Division
Date
1970
Rights
This item is authored by federal employees as part of their official duties and is therefore non-copyrightable and/or published by the federal government and now in the public domain.
Language
English
File(s)
Rural housing trends and prospects.jpg
(image/jpeg)
CAT87201961PDF.pdf
(application/pdf)