The number of U.S. households that fork out at least half of their income on rent is set to increase by 25% to 14.8 million over the next decade. The largest increase is expected to hit older adults, Hispanics, and single-person households the most, adding to a growing list of severely cost-burdened renters who are dedicating half their monthly income to household payments, according to a joint study conducted by the Enterprise Community Partners and the Harvard Joint Center for Housing Studies. Even when accounting for favorable trends in wages and rental costs, demographic forces, such as the rapid increases in minority and senior populations, could still cause a likely rent affordability crisis: “Our analysis shows that even in the unlikely event that income growth greatly outpaces rent gains, the number of severely cost-burdened renters will remain near current record levels,” said Christopher Herbert, managing director of Harvard’s Joint Center for Housing Studies, in a statement. This bleak news follows the recent finding by the same Harvard research institute that U.S.