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Housing policy and affordable housing

Hilber, Christian A. L. ORCID: 0000-0002-1352-495X and Schöni, Olivier (2022) Housing policy and affordable housing. In: Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Economics and Finance. Oxford University Press.

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Identification Number: 10.1093/acrefore/9780190625979.013.829

Abstract

Lack of affordable housing is a growing and often primary policy concern in cities around the world. The main underlying cause for the ‘affordability crisis’, which has been mounting for decades, is a combination of strong and growing demand for housing in desirable areas in conjunction with tight long-run supply constraints – both physical and man-made regulatory ones. The affordability crisis tends to predominately affect low- and moderate-income households. Increasingly, however, middle income households – who do not usually qualify for government support – are similarly affected. Policies that aim to tackle the housing affordability issue are numerous and differ enormously across countries. Key policies include mortgage subsidies, government equity loans, rent control, social or public housing, housing vouchers, low-income tax credits, and inclusionary zoning, amongst others. The overarching aim of these policies is to (i) reduce the periodic housing costs of or (ii) improve access to a certain tenure mode for qualifying households. Existing evidence reveals that the effectiveness, and the distributional and social welfare effects of housing policies depend not only on policy design, but also on local market conditions, institutional settings, indirect (dis-)incentives, and general equilibrium adjustments. While many mainstream housing policies are ineffective, costinefficient, and/or have undesirable distributional effects from an equity point of view, they tend to be politically popular. This is partly because targeted households poorly understand adverse indirect effects, which is exploited by vote-seeking politicians. Partly, it is because often the true beneficiaries of the policies are the politically powerful existing property owners (homeowners and landlords), who are not targeted but nevertheless benefit from positive policy-induced house price and rent capitalization effects. The facts that existing homeowners often have a voter-majority and landlords additionally may be able to influence the political process via lobbying leads to the conundrum of ineffective yet politically popular housing policies. In addition to targeted policies for individuals most in need (e.g., via housing vouchers or by providing subsidized housing), the most effective policies to improve housing affordability in superstar cities for all income groups might be those that focus on the root causes of the problem. These are (i) the strongly and unequally growing demand for housing in desirable markets and (ii) tight land use restrictions imposed by a majority of existing property owners that limit total supply of housing in these markets. Designing policies that tackle the root causes of the affordability crisis and help those in need, yet are palatable to a voter majority, is a major challenge for benevolent policy makers.

Item Type: Book Section
Official URL: https://oxfordre.com/economics/
Additional Information: © 2022 Oxford University Press
Divisions: Geography & Environment
Subjects: H Social Sciences > HD Industries. Land use. Labor > HD100 Land Use
Date Deposited: 24 Oct 2022 07:42
Last Modified: 16 May 2024 05:58
URI: http://eprints.lse.ac.uk/id/eprint/117152

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