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 Creation of the Low Income Housing Tax Credit
Low Income Housing Tax Credit Program Participation
The Low Income Housing Tax Credit (LIHTC) program was created by
Section 42 of the Tax Reform Act of 1986. The program
leverages the expenditure of public money in the form of uncollected tax
revenue with private equity investment to fund low income housing development.
Each state receives tax credits annually, based on a formula of $1.25 per
capita. It is then up to the relevant state agency to develop its own
application process for allocating the credits within Internal Revenue Code
guidelines. Developers submit project plan applications for credits, and then
generally sell them to investors, either directly or through a syndicator. The
tax credits are distributed over a ten-year period.
The LIHTC is currently the most important program through which the federal
government encourages the development of affordable rental housing. It is a
unique program within the context of the federal government's historical
supply-side intervention in the housing market. The LIHTC encourages private
investors to provide equity for the development of low income housing in return
for federal tax credits-a dollar for dollar reduction in tax liability. In the
years since the program's inception an entire industry has grown up around the
syndication of the tax credits and the development and financing of LIHTC
projects.
The number of units that have been built through the program is impressive.
Estimates range from a
U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) study
figure of 500,000 units completed between 1987-19941 to a
National Council of State Housing
Agencies (NCSHA) report of almost 900,000 units created from the program's
inception to 1997.2 State housing
agencies receive more than $3 billion in tax credits per year to allocate to
low income rental housing projects.3
LIHTC projects must remain in compliance with program regulations
for a minimum of 15 years (many states require a longer lock-in period)
or the tax credits may be revoked by the IRS. A project is considered
in compliance if 20% or more of the residential units are rent-restricted
(gross rent does not exceed 30% of the HUD-established income limitation)
and occupants have incomes 50% or less of the area median gross income,
or 40% or more of the units are rent-restricted and occupants have
incomes 60% or less of the area median gross income. Projects qualify
for one of three credits under the program. New building or substantial
rehabilitation without federal subsidy qualifies for a 9% tax credit,
new building or substantial rehabilitation with federal subsidy qualifies
for a 4% credit, and there is a 4% credit for acquiring an existing
building which will use additional credits for substantial rehabilitation.
1
Cummings, Jean L. and
Denise DiPasquale. 1998. Building Affordable Rental Housing: An Analysis of
the Low Income Housing Tax Credit, City Research, Inc.
2
Ernst & Young. 1997. The
Low Income Housing Tax Credit: The First Decade. E&Y Kenneth Leventhal
Real Estate Group. (prepared for the National Council of State Housing
Agencies) This figure is significantly higher than most other estimates.
3 Abt
Associates. 1996. Development and Analysis of the National Low Income
Housing Tax Credit Database. U.S. Department of Housing and Urban
Development Office of Policy Development and Research.
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NASLEF
12100 Sunset Hills Road, Suite 130
Reston, VA 20190
Phone: (703) 234-4058 Fax: (703) 435-4390
info@naslef.org
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