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by acd
536 days ago
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While zoning restrictions can limit housing supply, the dramatic house price increases observed globally are better explained by monetary policy, particularly historically low interest rates. This is evidenced by simultaneous price increases across jurisdictions with vastly different zoning laws. When interest rates fell to historic lows, monthly mortgage payments became more affordable, leading to increased buying power and competition across all markets - even those with flexible zoning. The rapid price changes following interest rate shifts, compared to the gradual effect of zoning policies, demonstrates that monetary policy is the dominant factor in recent price trends. |
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“Only in particular areas, especially New York City and California, do housing prices diverge substantially from the costs of new construction. The bulk of the evidence examined indicates that zoning and other land use controls are responsible for prices in high cost areas of the country” [1].
Inflation has raised construction costs; climate change the cost of homeownership. Beyond that, it’s almost all zoning.
> rapid price changes following interest rate shifts
Prices didn’t fall when the Fed spiked rates. The monetary-first hypothesis for housing requires epicycles to gain explanatory power over zoning.
Our housing crisis is a political choice.
[1] https://realestate.wharton.upenn.edu/working-papers/the-impa...