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Government regulation and changes in the affordable housing stock
This paper identifies the relationship between government controls on housing supply and changes in the stock of market housing affordable to low-income households. In studies of housing, policy makers and academics have focused considerable attention on both the shortage of good-quality affordable rental housing for low-Income households and the effect of land use regulations on house prices and the supply on new residential units without linking the two topics. This is the first effort we know of to test how government controls on the construction of new units affects the supply of affordable rental accommodations. We conduct these tests using a filtering model, where units move between quality sub-markets depending on demand and the maintenance, renovation, and repair decisions of landlords. Here, we take advantage of the panel nature of the AHS metropolitan surveys to identify the relationship between restrictions on new construction and rent control policies and the movement of individual housing units in and out of the stock of units affordable to low-income households. First, we find that the greater the supply elasticity for new construction, the less likely are affordable rental units to filter up and out of the affordable stock. Second, our empirical results suggest that restrictions on new construction are likely to reduce the affordable stock as it increases the probability that an affordable unit becomes unaffordable. Third, the relationship between affordable uncontrolled units and the presence of rent control is more confusing. We find the surprising result that as the percentage of rent controlled units in an area rises, the remaining affordable non-rent controlled units actually have a lower probability of filtering up relative to staying affordable. We suspect that this is an artifact of a selection bias in the identification of market-rate units that are affordable in the presence of rent control. This process might result in uncontrolled units that remain affordable when rent control is more pervasive having much lower unobserved quality or the presence of negative externality from poorly maintained rent control stock. Both of these factors would reduce the probability that these units filter up. ; Non UBC ; Business, Sauder School of ; Unreviewed ; Faculty
Government regulation and changes in the affordable housing stock
This paper identifies the relationship between government controls on housing supply and changes in the stock of market housing affordable to low-income households. In studies of housing, policy makers and academics have focused considerable attention on both the shortage of good-quality affordable rental housing for low-Income households and the effect of land use regulations on house prices and the supply on new residential units without linking the two topics. This is the first effort we know of to test how government controls on the construction of new units affects the supply of affordable rental accommodations. We conduct these tests using a filtering model, where units move between quality sub-markets depending on demand and the maintenance, renovation, and repair decisions of landlords. Here, we take advantage of the panel nature of the AHS metropolitan surveys to identify the relationship between restrictions on new construction and rent control policies and the movement of individual housing units in and out of the stock of units affordable to low-income households. First, we find that the greater the supply elasticity for new construction, the less likely are affordable rental units to filter up and out of the affordable stock. Second, our empirical results suggest that restrictions on new construction are likely to reduce the affordable stock as it increases the probability that an affordable unit becomes unaffordable. Third, the relationship between affordable uncontrolled units and the presence of rent control is more confusing. We find the surprising result that as the percentage of rent controlled units in an area rises, the remaining affordable non-rent controlled units actually have a lower probability of filtering up relative to staying affordable. We suspect that this is an artifact of a selection bias in the identification of market-rate units that are affordable in the presence of rent control. This process might result in uncontrolled units that remain affordable when rent control is more pervasive having much lower unobserved quality or the presence of negative externality from poorly maintained rent control stock. Both of these factors would reduce the probability that these units filter up. ; Non UBC ; Business, Sauder School of ; Unreviewed ; Faculty
Government regulation and changes in the affordable housing stock
2002-05-01
Paper
Electronic Resource
English
DDC:
690
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