“The affordability of housing is overwhelmingly a function of just one thing, the extent to which governments place artificial restrictions on the supply of residential land,” said Donald Brash, governor of the Reserve Bank of New Zealand (the national central bank) for nearly 15 years.Some prices don't want affordable home prices.If Congress was concerned about this issue they'd ban zoning and land use restrictions.
America has become two nations with respect to housing costs and housing cost increases. Princeton economist and New York Times columnist Paul Krugman put his finger on the cause of the difference more than three years ago. Others have made similar findings, such as Edward Glaeser at Harvard, Theo Eicher at the University of Washington and Kate Barker of the Bank of England. House prices have exploded in highly regulated markets, while they have changed little where traditional land use regulations still apply.
The predictable economic effects have occurred with a vengeance in more regulated (smart growth) metropolitan markets. From 2000 to 2007, the median house price rose an average of $174,000 in the more regulated metropolitan markets with more than 1,000,000 population. In the less regulated markets, the average increase was $12,500.
The easy money was available everywhere in the nation increasing the demand for housing in most markets. But in most of the nation, housing price increases were modest, as planning systems allowed new housing to be provided at historically competitive prices. For example, in Atlanta, Dallas-Fort Worth and Houston, the three fastest growing metropolitan areas in the high-income world with more than 5,000,000 population, housing prices changed little in relation to household incomes. Furthermore, from 2000 to 2007, 2,550,000 million people (domestic migrants) left the more restrictive metropolitan markets for elsewhere in the country. That pretty well dismisses the idea that demand was the primary cause of the price escalation.
Wednesday, September 24, 2008
The Smart Growth Bailout?
New Geography reports: