Replication data for: Sand Castles before the Tide? Affordable Housing in Expensive Cities
Principal Investigator(s): View help for Principal Investigator(s) Gabriel Metcalf
Version: View help for Version V1
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Project Citation:
Metcalf, Gabriel. Replication data for: Sand Castles before the Tide? Affordable Housing in Expensive Cities. Nashville, TN: American Economic Association [publisher], 2018. Ann Arbor, MI: Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research [distributor], 2019-10-12. https://doi.org/10.3886/E114007V1
Project Description
Summary:
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This article focuses on cities with unprecedented economic success and a seemingly permanent crisis of affordable housing. In the expensive cities, policymakers expend
great amounts of energy trying to bring down housing costs with subsidies for affordable housing and sometimes with rent control. But these efforts are undermined by
planning decisions that make housing for most people vastly more expensive than it has to be by restricting the supply of new units even in the face of growing demand. I
begin by describing current housing policy in the expensive metro areas of the United States. I then show how this combination of policies affecting housing, despite internal
contradictions, makes sense from the perspective of the political coalitions that can form in a setting of fragmented local jurisdictions, local control over land use policies,
and homeowner control over local government. Finally, I propose some more effective approaches to housing policy. My view is that the effects of the formal affordable
housing policies of expensive cities are quite small in their impact when compared to the size of the problem—like sand castles before the tide. I will argue that we
can do more, potentially much more, to create subsidized affordable housing in high-cost American cities. But more fundamentally, we will need to rethink the broader set of
exclusionary land use policies that are the primary reason that housing in these cities has become so expensive. We cannot solve the problem unless we fix the housing
market itself.
Scope of Project
JEL Classification:
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R21 Urban, Rural, Regional, Real Estate, and Transportation Economics: Housing Demand
R31 Housing Supply and Markets
R38 Production Analysis and Firm Location: Government Policy
R21 Urban, Rural, Regional, Real Estate, and Transportation Economics: Housing Demand
R31 Housing Supply and Markets
R38 Production Analysis and Firm Location: Government Policy
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