1. This week at Market Urbanism: The “Global Buyers” Argument by Michael LewynThe argument makes sense only when you add the following premise: housing prices can only be high in the presence of huge numbers of rich foreigners. I really don’t see any reason to take this premise … [Read more...]
Market Urbanism MUsings September 9, 2016
1. This week at Market Urbanism Shut Out: How Land-Use Regulations Hurt the Poor by Sandy IkedaMy colleague Emily Washington and I are reviewing the literature on how land-use regulations disproportionately raise the cost of real estate for the poor. I’d like to share a few of our … [Read more...]
Market Urbanism MUsings September 2, 2016
1. This week at Market Urbanism Palo Alto: The Land of Too Many Jobs by Jeff FongThe status quo isn’t defensible if you’re concerned with environmental degradation, inequality, poverty, slow growth, or even the decline of property rights. But, for tax protected homeowners, the status … [Read more...]
Market Urbanism MUsings August 26, 2016
1. This week at Market Urbanism Episode 1 of the Market Urbanism podcast came out this week. Nolan Gray plans to release new episodes bi-weekly. The RSS feed is http://feeds.soundcloud.com/users/soundcloud:users:236686274/sounds.rssYou can currently find the podcast on … [Read more...]
Market Urbanism MUsings August 19, 2016
1. This week at Market Urbanism Buses and Trains: The Turtle and the Hare? by Asher MeyersWith buses a relatively safe, cheap and green form of travel, the wisdom of the government favoring trains at great public expense is dubious. This isn’t to say that trains are bad and buses … [Read more...]
Market Urbanism MUsings August 5, 2016
1. This week at Market Urbanism Does Home-sharing Create Negative Externalities? by Michael LewynHomeowners’ fear of being overrun by “transient” renters is based on an outmoded picture of urban life. In a rural area where most people are born and die in the same town, a fear of … [Read more...]
Market Urbanism MUsings July 29, 2016 (100 years of NYC Zoning bonus links)
1. This week at Market Urbanism Does President Obama Have A ‘Regionalism’ Agenda? by Scott BeyerSuch policies represent less a turn towards socialism, than one away from the nation’s existing socialized paradigm favoring suburbs, wherein housing regulations restrict dense infill … [Read more...]
Market Urbanism MUsings July 22, 2016
1. This week at Market Urbanism Quantifying the effects of California zoning rules by Emily HamiltonKip Jackson finds that California zoning rules and other land-use restrictions not only reduce the growth rate of new housing stock, but a new regulation can actually be expected to reduce the … [Read more...]