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Can more housing supply solve the affordability crisis? : evidence from a neighborhood choice model

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublication details: Regional Science and Urban Economics, 24 April 2018.Description: 35 pagesSubject(s): Online resources: Summary: Abstract: We estimate a neighborhood choice model using 2014 American Community Survey data to investigate the degree to which new housing supply can improve housing affordability. In the model, equilibrium rental rates are determined so that the number of households choosing each neighborhood is equal to the number of housing units in each neighborhood. We use the estimated model to simulate how rental rates would respond to an exogenous increase in the number of housing units in a neighborhood. We find that the rent elasticity is low, and thus marginal reductions in supply constraints alone are unlikely to meaningfully reduce rent burdens. The reason for this result appears to be that rental rates are more closely determined by the level of amenities in a neighborhood—as in a Rosen-Roback spatial equilibrium framework—than by the supply of housing.
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KEYWORDS: Housing affordability, housing supply, neighborhood choice

Please cite this article as: Anenberg, E., Kung, E., Can more housing supply solve the affordability crisis? Evidence from a neighborhood choice model, Regional Science and Urban Economics (2018), doi: 10.1016/j.regsciurbeco.2018.04.012.

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