For roughly 1.4 million people living in Georgia, a person earning minimum wage would need to work nearly four full-time jobs — or over 140 hours a week — to make monthly rent payments.
In the state of Georgia, where the minimum wage is not higher than the current federal standard of $7.23, the average income per hour sits at $23.44, which means a zero-bedroom apartment is not affordable for those earning the state’s average wages per hour. To be able to make rent, given Georgia’s standard minimum wage, $7.25 per hour, landlords and rental companies would have to set rental payments at $377 per month.
A new study
Per the NLIHC, Georgia citizens would need to work anywhere between 140 and 238 hours just to afford to lease apartments with one to four bedrooms. With the current seven-day workweek being made up of 168 hours, this is nearly impossible to do. Moreover, per the “Out of Reach” report, a person would only have 28 free hours a week if they wanted to maintain rent, according to the current standards in place.
Currently, according to the Fair Market Rent
(FMR), the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development considers prices between $1,272 and $2,242 as the average amount of an apartment, depending upon the number of bedrooms. Currently, the actual rents costs do not reflect the FMR.While this report looks at the state of Georgia overall, it is important to note that the rental markets vary across the many cities that make up
the Peach State, including Atlanta, Savannah, Albany, and a host of others. Housing vouchers deployed by the federal government, as well as local and state-level rental assistance programs across different cities in the state, are just some of the ways that current Georgia officials are attempting to alleviate concerns about the cost of rent and the effect it has on its citizens.RELATED CONTENT: Florida Minimum Wage Workers Must Grind 100 Hours To Afford Housing