Debate: Make Housing Affordable by Abolishing Growth Boundaries, Not Ending Density Restrictions
Why not abolish both?

Improve Housing Affordability by Restoring the Competitive Land Market
Affirmative: Wendell Cox

In too many metropolitan areas, housing is no longer affordable for middle-class households, especially in markets subject to "urban containment," now the world's dominant planning regime. According to planning experts
Arthur C. Nelson and Casey Dawkins, urban containment draws "a line around an urban area"; it includes urban growth boundaries and greenbelts. It is "explicitly designed to limit the development of land outside a defined urban area, while encouraging" infill, to limit or block organic urban expansion.
Urban containment is intended to increase urban land costs. Shifting demand inside the contained area produces an abrupt increase in land values at the boundary, distorting the land value gradient. As Nelson and Dawkins say, "This shift should decrease the value of land outside the boundary and increase the value of land inside the boundary"(emphasis added), which effectively sets a higher "floor value" for urban land. This is the "urban containment effect."
Land values have indeed risen across urban growth boundaries, from eight to 20 times according to research in the U.S., Australia, and New Zealand. Housing has become shockingly unaffordable, despite expectations that boundary expansions and densification would keep housing affordable. The key to materially improving affordability is neutralizing the consequences of urban containment.
A permanent seller's market in land has developed, making it too expensive to build housing for the middle class. International housing expert Shlomo Angel stresses that "supply must be adequate to allow competition to determine land prices," and that "the explicit containment of urban expansion—by greenbelts, as in Seoul, Korea or in English cities, by urban growth boundaries, as in Portland, Oregon, or by environmental restrictions as in California—has inevitably been associated with declines in housing affordability."
Alain Bertaud, former World Bank principal planner, wrote that "arbitrary limits on city expansion (such as green-belts or urban growth boundaries)" result in "predictably higher prices."
In the U.S., the U.K., Canada, Australia, and New Zealand, median price-to-income ratios have escalated under urban containment from 3.0 or less. By 2019, the range between the most and least affordable U.S. major markets increased by five years of median household income. The median multiple had tripled in the least affordable markets, while all severely unaffordable markets had urban containment, according to the Demographia International Housing Affordability Survey.
In the five-county San Francisco market,Edward Glaeser and Joseph Gyourko estimate that land values for the median priced house are 10 times the normal 20 percent.
Meanwhile, house construction costs vary far less than land values.
The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) reports that housing costs have been growing "three times faster than household median income over the last two decades" and have been the "main driver" of rising middle-class expenditures. The OECD maintains that "the current generation…has lower chances of achieving the same standard of living as its parents." Much of the middle class could be facing an existential crisis.
Cost-of-living differences arise principally from housing affordability differences.
Paul Cheshire of the London School of Economics finds a "fatal mismatch" between planning and the market, concluding that urban containment is irreconcilable with housing affordability and price stability.
In contrast, removal of density restrictions in municipal zoning is unlikely to materially improve housing affordability. Virtually all major markets have multiple local jurisdictions (in the U.S., the average market has more than 100), while urban containment is typically imposed by higher-level governments (nations, states, provinces, and metropolitan areas). Municipal zoning cannot trump the consequences of urban containment.
Vancouver, Canada, has nearly doubled its density within its already developed 1951 limits (unparalleled among the high-income world's central cities), and its suburbs are densifying. Yet the Vancouver market has become the least affordable in Canada and the United States, with a 13.3 median multiple. As Patrick Condon of the University of British Columbia concludes, "No amount of opening zoning or allowing for development will cause prices to go down."
Build More Housing Downtown, Where People Want To Live
Negative: Christian Britschgi
An increasingly uncontroversial view among policy wonks on the left, right, and center is that housing in America is too expensive and government regulation is to blame.
The question, then, is which regulations we should prioritize repealing—urban growth boundaries that limit greenfield single-family development on the exurban fringe, or zoning restrictions that ban apartments and other forms of dense housing within the already-developed urban core.
As a libertarian, I think neither set of regulations is a good idea. Both interfere with property rights, reduce housing production, and raise housing costs.
That said, expensive urban metro areas would benefit most from upzoning already-developed neighborhoods to allow more infill development. If forced to choose, we should prioritize the legalization of more town homes, apartments, condos, and high rises downtown over eliminating restrictions on exurban McMansions.
We should do that because that's what America's heavily regulated market for land suggests people want.
The economist Jed Kolko has shown that the past decade was one of densification. The percentage of Americans who lived in the densest census tracts increased. The densest neighborhoods grew faster than lower-density urban neighborhoods and suburbs. Only exurban census tracts grew faster.
That last datapoint might suggest urban growth boundaries are the real constraint on housing production. But real estate prices also grew fastest in the densest tracts, suggesting that's where demand for new housing really is. If we're prioritizing reforms, we should prioritize building in places where people are saying with their dollars that they want to live.
Libertarians who focus on urban growth boundaries argue that high urban land prices are themselves a creation of growth boundaries: Would-be suburbanites are crowded into cities against their will, and prices go up as a result. This isn't necessarily wrong—but it is overstated.
The growth boundary in Portland, Oregon, certainly raises prices. It's also been expanded three dozen times since it was created. It wasn't until 2020 that the city implemented reforms abolishing the single-family-only zoning that had covered 77 percent of residential land.
Likewise, it strains credulity to think the primary reason apartment rents are high in downtown D.C., where developers are building as many units as they're allowed, is because agricultural zoning in Montgomery County, Maryland, 35 miles away, is stopping new subdivisions.
Lowering housing costs for people who demonstrably want to live in the city is going to require legalizing more housing supply there, and that requires lifting density restrictions.
The good news is where urban density restrictions are lifted, builders respond by building a lot of new housing. That happens even in places where there are few restrictions on exurban growth.
Houston, Texas, famously has no zoning code. Neither the state nor surrounding jurisdictions put many restrictions on exurban development either. Yet in 1998, when the city loosened the few density restrictions it does have—in the form of setback requirements and minimum lot sizes—within its urban core, the construction of newly legal town homes exploded and population densities in some neighborhoods doubled. Town home–buying Houstonians weren't legally constrained from getting a new house out in the sticks. When given an affordable option, they opted for something closer to downtown.
Critics of upzoning sometimes argue America's densest cities are also its most expensive. Allowing more dense housing, they say, will just get you a larger, more expensive city. This confuses stocks and flows.
San Francisco and New York City are expensive not because developers started building dense housing but because downzonings stopped them from adding more to meet continually rising demand. To suggest dense cities can never be affordable is like arguing that eating a meal won't nourish you because you'll eventually be hungry again.
Look at liberally zoned, ultradense Tokyo. It has built a lot of housing to match its growing population, and housing costs have been flat there for decades.
Generally speaking, we should let people build whatever, wherever. When multiple laws unjustly constrict that freedom, we should focus on eliminating the ones that most bind people's behavior. In housing policy, that would be inner-city and suburban apartment bans. If we can't wipe out all the restrictions in one fell swoop, then those bans should be the first to go.
Subscribers have access to Reason's whole May 2023 issue now. These debates and the rest of the issue will be released throughout the month for everyone else. Consider subscribing today!
- Debate: It's Time for a National Divorce
- Debate: Artificial Intelligence Should Be Regulated
- Debate: Democracy Is the Worst Form of Government Except for All the Others
- Debate: To Preserve Individual Liberty, Government Must Affirmatively Intervene in the Culture War
- Debate: The E.U. Was a Mistake
- Debate: The U.S. Should Increase Funding for the Defense of Ukraine
- Debate: Mentally Ill Homeless People Must Be Locked Up for Public Safety
- Debate: Despite the Welfare State, the U.S. Should Open Its Borders
- Debate: Cats Are More Libertarian Than Dogs
- Debate: Make Housing Affordable by Abolishing Growth Boundaries, Not Ending Density Restrictions
- Debate: Bitcoin Is the Future of Free Exchange
- Debate: Be Optimistic About the World
Rent Free is a weekly newsletter from Christian Britschgi on urbanism and the fight for less regulation, more housing, more property rights, and more freedom in America's cities.
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"Build More Housing Downtown, Where People Want To Live"
Uh, sure. Given that hordes of people all want to live in very specific locations, all we need to do is build a few 1000 floor apartment buildings with at least 100 units on each floor.
A tale of regulation.
I live in my city's boho, arty, street festival neighborhood. Lotta shoppes. restaurants, quirky crap. Popular destination for partying and what not.
Got my house here because the city passed an ordinance that stopped landlords from cutting up gorgeous old homes into three and four apartments. That let me talk 40k off the price.
Let a lot of people do the same.
And the neighborhood thrived. The art got artier. The houses got quirkier, gardens spread and the area boomed.
And people wanted to live there.
So the new city government decided that, in order to expand their tax theiving, the area needed more housing.
Since they didn't have the votes to allow them to rescind the anti-densification law, they modified the zoning to allow for apartment buildings. But not obtrusive one. That was the bone they threw us.
And then, over the course of the next four years they began putting in 'mixed use' buildings. In doing so, the festivals had to be cancelled. The parking had to be eliminated. And all the things that made people WANT to be there had to be abated.
The undestroyed areas around the edges of the neighborhood have jumped in value-- but the main streets now have 'unobtrusive' largely empty buildings looming up behind them.
Some of the weirder shops have gone. The art shows moved and may never be back.
Why?
Central planners.
Gentrification is fine if it is the neighborhood itself doing it organically. As soon as government functionaries get in with their 'for the common good'(meaning THEIR pockets) mindset, things go to trash.
NIMBYism is derided......unless it's called 'local control'. Because that's what NIMBYISM actually is. But sometimes it runs afoul of central planners. And then it has to be demonized.
For the common good.
“An increasingly uncontroversial view among policy wonks on the left, right, and center is that housing in America is too expensive and government regulation is to blame.” There’s no such thing as “too expensive.” There’s just “more expensive than it would be without government meddling.”
I wish people understood now how land is different. Zoning and all micro level bureaucracy - or just getting rid of what exists - is always the wrong approach because no matter what the incentive or disincentive, land can't be created outside the Netherlands model. Only the title can change and like it or not that does require govt.
Land value is mostly driven by what govt or some broadly equivalent community does. Not what an individual landowner does. You can build a skyscraper in the middle of the prairie but it won't change the value of the land. What WILL change the value of the land?
What happens when both fail to usher in "affordable housing" outside of a possible slight dip in the growth of housing prices which takes a vigorous scientific study employing a microscope and CP-fuckin'-A to find it?
Simply deport all 40 million illegal aliens. Housing will be abundant and cheap!
What business is it of goverment to promote or restrict "affordable" housing? And if so, by what metric?
Perhaps people would not suspect you to be closeted leftists and progressives if you did not so willingly buy into their rhetorical tools you tools.
What business is it of government to keep house prices jacked up or jack them up directly? There's a hella lot more government doing that.
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