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UCLA Housing Voice

Latest episodes

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Jul 10, 2024 • 53min

Ep 74: Racial (and Spatial) Disparities in Rental Assistance with Andrew Fenelon

Black households make up a disproportionate share of rent assistance recipients. Andrew Fenelon discusses how a “two-tiered approach to housing support" favoring white homeowners helped create the disparity.Show notes:Fenelon, A. (2024). Race, housing policy, and the demographic and spatial structure of modern housing programs: Who receives rental assistance and where do they live? Journal of Urban Affairs, 46(5), 944-961.Streets.MN article about the Bryant Avenue Bike Path (with photos).Episode 17 of UCLA Housing Voice, discussing housing vouchers with Rob Collinson.Episode 37 of UCLA Housing Voice, discussing public housing with Akira Drake Rodriguez.Tax Policy Center analysis of the costs of U.S. homeownership assistance programs.
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Jun 26, 2024 • 1h 7min

Ep 73: French For-Profit Social Housing Developers with Julie Pollard

Before the 2000s, French real estate developers were prohibited from building social housing. Today, they build more than half of it. Julie Pollard shares how two seemingly unrelated policies came together to make this rapid shift possible.Show notes:Pollard, J. (2023). The political conditions of the rise of real-estate developers in French housing policies. Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space, 41(2), 274-291.Read about the Clichy-Batignolles eco-district (in English).Episode 20 of UCLA Housing Voice with Magda Maaoui (2022), on France’s social housing production and the SRU Law.Phillips, S. (2024). Lessons from California's Homekey Program: Adding Affordable Housing by Buying Market-Rate Apartment Buildings. UCLA Lewis Center for Regional Policy Studies.
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Jun 3, 2024 • 1h 1min

Ep 72: Notes on Tokyo’s Housing, Land Use, and Urban Planning with Shane Phillips

In this episode, Shane combines insights from a recent trip to Tokyo with official data on housing production, affordability, land use policy, and more.Show notes:Twitter thread of photos and observations during my trip.Episode 16 of the UCLA Housing Voice Podcast with Jiro Yoshida, on Japanese Housing PolicyJapanese population by prefecture.JR East Yamanote Line timetable.Mainichi article on recovering transit ridership on the Yamanote Line.The myth of pedestrian infrastructure in a world of cars, by Joe Cortright in City Observatory.Data on housing starts vs. existing home sales in the US, Japan, and selected other countries – see pg. 137.Report comparing Japanese and United Kingdom homebuilding practices in the early 2000s, by James Barlow and Ritsuko OzakiConstruction Physics articles on Toyota’s prefab homes and Japan’s skyscraper factories.Yoshida, J. (2021). Land scarcity, high construction volume, and distinctive leases characterize Japan’s rental housing markets. Brookings Institution.Suzuki, M., Asami, Y., & Shimizu, C. (2021). Housing rent rigidity under downward pressure: Unit-level longitudinal evidence from Tokyo. Journal of Housing Economics, 52, 101762.Excerpt from Carmageddon: How Cars Make Life Worse and What to Do About It, written by Daniel Knowles and published by Abrams Press.Center for Neighborhood Technology’s Housing + Transportation Index.Iwata, S., & Yamaga, H. (2004). The costs and benefits of tenancy rent control in Tokyo. Institute of Policy and Planning Sciences, Discussion Paper Series, (1081).Guide to Japan’s zoning code.Urban Kchoze blog post on Japanese zoning.Zoning map of Tokyo.
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May 15, 2024 • 1h 8min

Ep 71: How China Created a Housing Market with Lan Deng

Each year, more money is invested in China's housing market than any other. Lan Deng shares how the market was shaped and the heavy role the government still plays, and what housing in China looks like today.Show notes:Deng, L., & Chen, J. (2019). Market development, state intervention, and the dynamics of new housing investment in China. Journal of Urban Affairs, 41(2), 223-247.Deng, L., Li, S., Zuo, W., & Han, Y. (2024). Housing production and the structural transformation of China’s real estate development industry. Housing Studies, 1-26.News article and video of rail line through apartment building in Chongqing.Monkkonen, P., Deng, G., & Hu, W. (2019). Does developers' ownership structure shape their market behavior? Evidence from state owned enterprises in Chengdu, Sichuan, 2004–2011. Cities, 84, 151-158.UCLA Housing Voice interview with Chua Beng Huat on Singapore’s Public Housing program.
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16 snips
May 1, 2024 • 1h 3min

Encore Episode: Japanese Housing Policy with Jiro Yoshida

Professor Jiro Yoshida discusses Japanese housing policy, highlighting Tokyo's high production rates and affordable housing. Topics include real estate depreciation, tax policy impact, unique zoning regulations, challenges in disrupting the housing market, balancing community interests and development goals, tenant protections, housing depreciation rates, and tax policies on housing construction.
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9 snips
Apr 17, 2024 • 1h 12min

Ep 70: Overcoming Resistance to Density with David Kaufmann and Michael Wicki

Researchers David Kaufmann and Michael Wicki discuss factors influencing public support for dense housing, exploring differences between Europe and the US in terms of planning tools, housing cooperatives, and nightlife. They delve into the impact of rent control and inclusionary zoning on public acceptance, highlighting challenges and benefits of mixed-use buildings. The podcast also explores Swiss voting behavior, urban density studies across cities, and strategies for designing inclusive housing projects.
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Apr 3, 2024 • 57min

Ep 69: Low-Income Housing and 'Crowd Out' with Michael Eriksen

Subsidized affordable housing development reduces costs for lower-income households directly. It also reduces costs indirectly, by increasing the overall supply of housing — or does it? Michael Eriksen joins to discuss the issue of “crowd out” in affordable housing production.Show notes:Eriksen, M. D., & Rosenthal, S. S. (2010). Crowd out effects of place-based subsidized rental housing: New evidence from the LIHTC program. Journal of Public Economics, 94(11-12), 953-966.Cummings, J. L., & DiPasquale, D. (1999). The Low‐Income Housing Tax Credit: An analysis of the first ten years. Housing Policy Debate, 10(2), 251-307.Click here for Pathways Home, our eight-part series on homelessness.Baum-Snow, N., & Marion, J. (2009). The effects of low income housing tax credit developments on neighborhoods. Journal of Public Economics, 93(5-6), 654-666.Diamond, R., & McQuade, T. (2019). Who wants affordable housing in their backyard? An equilibrium analysis of low-income property development. Journal of Political Economy, 127(3), 1063-1117.
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Mar 6, 2024 • 1h 8min

Ep 68: Summarizing the Research on Homelessness with Janey Rountree (Pathways Home pt. 8)

In this final installment of the Pathways Home series on homelessness policy and research, we discuss lessons and key takeaways from the previous seven episodes with our UCLA colleague, Janey Rountree.Show notes:Click here to find all eight episodes of the Pathways Home limited series on homelessness.Blackwell, B., & Santillano, R. (2023). Do Time-Limited Subsidy Programs Reduce Homelessness for Single Adults? California Policy Lab.
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Feb 21, 2024 • 1h 3min

Ep 67: How We Cut Veteran Homelessness By Half with Monica Diaz and Shawn Liu (Pathways Home pt. 7)

Since 2009, homelessness among U.S. veterans has fallen by more than half. Among the overall population, it hasn’t budged. Monica Diaz and Shawn Liu of the Department of Veterans Affairs share some of the story behind the VA's success.Show notes:Read more about the VA Homeless Programs Office at their website.Khadduri, J., de Sousa, T., Andrichik, A., Prestera, E., Rush, K., Tano, C., and Wheeler, M. (2023). The 2023 Annual Homelessness Assessment Report (AHAR) to Congress. Part 1: Point-In-Time Estimates of Homelessness. U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, Office of Planning and Research.Colburn, G., & Aldern, C. P. (2022). Homelessness is a Housing Problem: How structural factors explain US patterns. University of California Press.O’Toole, T., & Kane, V. (2014). Return on Investment Analysis and Modeling (white paper). VA National Center on Homelessness Among Veterans, U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs.O'Flaherty, B. (2019). Homelessness research: A guide for economists (and friends). Journal of Housing Economics, 44, 1-25.
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Feb 7, 2024 • 1h 11min

Ep 66: Chronic Homelessness and Housing First with Tim Aubry (Pathways Home pt. 6)

The Housing First approach starts with providing homes to chronically unhoused people, but it doesn’t stop there — and that’s what makes it so effective. Tim Aubry shares findings from a major Housing First study and the keys to a successful program.Show notes:Goering, P., Veldhuizen, S., Watson, A., Adair, C., Kopp, B., Latimer, E., Nelson, G., MacNaughton, E., Streiner, D., Rabouin, D., Ly, A., Powell, G., & Aubry, T., (2014). National Final Report: Cross-Site At Home/Chez Soi Project. Mental Health Commission of Canada.UCLA Housing Voice episode 64, with Beth Shinn, talking about effective interventions to family homelessness and a brief mention of Housing First.Aubry, T., Bloch, G., Brcic, V., Saad, A., Magwood, O., Abdalla, T., ... & Pottie, K. (2020). Effectiveness of permanent supportive housing and income assistance interventions for homeless individuals in high-income countries: a systematic review. The Lancet Public Health, 5(6), e342-e360.

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