Fair Housing, Unfair Housing
In: 99 Washington University Law Review Online (2021)
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In: 99 Washington University Law Review Online (2021)
SSRN
In: Contributions to Economics; Housing Policy Reforms in Post Socialist Europe, S. 139-158
In: Action Series in housing and community development
In: Public administration series : Bibliography P-487
In: Administration, Band 36, Heft 4, S. 7
ISSN: 0001-8325
Issues of housing in India are synonymous with ignorance of housing in active government involvement at the policy and program formulation levels. They are also due to the problems that unplanned urbanization, income disparity, poverty, illiteracy, and unemployment brought. These issues extenuated the housing problem, causing a housing shortage of 51 million in 2011. Though India has a long history of establishing policies, programs, and institutions to cater to housing, without allocating adequate resources, their impact in ameliorating the shortage has been marginal. This paper argues that to address the housing shortage in India, there is desperate need to prepare a framework for housing by (i) including housing as a constitutional right; (ii) resolving issues of unclear land titles and ensuing claims; (iii) building adequate financial resources for affordable housing programs; (iv) building responsive instruments to facilitate the affordability of housing by all income segments; and (v) overcoming market segmentation, which is currently catering to the housing needs of creditworthy clients and is overlooking the growing demand from middle- and lower-income segments. India needs to leverage its extensive architecture of agencies, policies, and market frameworks for housing by equipping them with adequate resources so they can deliver housing for all.
BASE
In: Regional and Local Economic Development, S. 178-200
In: NBER working paper series 14193
"Like many other assets, housing prices are quite volatile relative to observable changes in fundamentals. If we are going to understand boom-bust housing cycles, we must incorporate housing supply. In this paper, we present a simple model of housing bubbles that predicts that places with more elastic housing supply have fewer and shorter bubbles, with smaller price increases. However, the welfare consequences of bubbles may actually be higher in more elastic places because those places will overbuild more in response to a bubble. The data show that the price run-ups of the 1980s were almost exclusively experienced in cities where housing supply is more inelastic. More elastic places had slightly larger increases in building during that period. Over the past five years, a modest number of more elastic places also experienced large price booms, but as the model suggests, these booms seem to have been quite short. Prices are already moving back towards construction costs in those areas"--National Bureau of Economic Research web site
In: Administration, Band 36, Heft 1989
ISSN: 0001-8325
In: Pacific economic review, Band 15, Heft 5, S. 697-707
ISSN: 1468-0106
In: World affairs: a journal of ideas and debate, Band 152, Heft 2, S. 100
ISSN: 0043-8200