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Housing Policy

Housing Policy Can Be Win-Win

Allowing more homes to be built on existing residential land would be good for homeowners, homebuyers, and homebuilders.

Christian Britschgi | 2.3.2026 4:20 PM

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Donald Trump |  CNP/AdMedia/SIPA/Newscom
( CNP/AdMedia/SIPA/Newscom)

Happy Tuesday, and welcome to another edition of Rent Free.

This week's newsletter takes on some rather unfortunate comments from President Donald Trump about his desire to keep housing prices high for current owners, even if it means less affordability for everyone else.

Additionally, we have an item on the Trump administration's strange, probably illegal, but still interesting effort to preempt local permitting requirements for wildfire rebuilds in Los Angeles.

Also, if you'll forgive some non-housing-related self-promotion, I've started a new podcast called Freed Up with my colleague Robby Soave. Each week, we shoot the breeze about the week's news, plus movies, books, and more.

If you're in the market for a podcast where the hosts discuss how to improve the rules of Risk or whether Mad Men is a Randian drama, this is the show for you.

Anyway, on with the housing news.

Rent Free Newsletter by Christian Britschgi. Get more of Christian's urban regulation, development, and zoning coverage.

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Housing Policy Can Be Win-Win

President Donald Trump caused a major stir for saying that he wants to keep the price of housing high for existing homeowners while also making it easier for first-time homebuyers to purchase a house.

"People that own their homes: We're going to keep them wealthy. We're going to keep those prices up. We're not going to destroy the value of their homes so that somebody who didn't work very hard can buy a home," said Trump during the Cabinet meeting last Thursday.

"When you get the housing—when you make it too easy and too cheap to buy houses, those values come down. I don't want those values to come down," he added.

Trump: "People that own their homes: we're gonna keep them wealthy. We're gonna keep those prices up. We're not gonna destroy the value of their homes so that somebody who didn't work very hard can buy a home." pic.twitter.com/V3cviRAO3F

— unusual_whales (@unusual_whales) January 29, 2026

The president's comments clearly struck a nerve for a couple of reasons.

Trump said pretty bluntly what people often argue is the implicit goal of American housing policy: keeping prices high for incumbent owners at the expense of first-time buyers.

He also fully embraced the supposed contradiction of a housing policy that's supposed to boost both homeownership and home values. The higher the values go, the fewer people are actually able to afford to buy homes.

There's reason to be skeptical of Trump's plan to use lower interest rates to square this circle.

As Daniel McCue notes in a brief for Harvard University's Joint Center for Housing Studies, interest rates are "not abnormally high in historical terms. That is not the case for home prices which, after increasing by 50 percent nationwide since 2020, are at unprecedented heights in nominal terms, real terms, and relative to household incomes."

Lower mortgage rates would reduce buyers' monthly payments, but that only helps so much when prices are as inflated as they are.

Creating true housing affordability for homebuyers would require an expansion of housing supply to lower overall housing prices—the thing Trump said he did not want to do.

The good news is that the federal government does not have too much direct influence over the number of homes that are built in the country. It's local and state governments that decide what's allowed to be built where.

Local and state policies are overwhelmingly moving in the direction of enabling more supply, not less, through liberalizing zoning and building codes, relaxing growth controls, and streamlining permitting processes.

The president's critics on social media were right to chide him for embracing a zero-sum, protectionist housing policy that limits new construction to increase home prices for current owners.

Yet it'd also be a mistake to completely dismiss the idea that we can lower buyers' housing costs and raise property values at the same time. Contra the president, that can easily be accomplished by allowing more homes to be built on existing residential land.

Free markets are generally win-win institutions. One should expect that free market reforms in the housing sector would produce win-wins for homeowners, buyers, and builders.

When local officials "upzone" land to allow more housing to be built on it, one expects the value of that land to increase to reflect the additional development potential. If a single-family property is upzoned to allow apartment construction, the current owner will see a windfall increase in the value of their property.

For recent, real-world evidence of this, I'd suggest people watch this news segment from Sydney, Australia, where upzoning has created a hot seller's market.

While upzoning drives up the cost of individual parcels, one would also expect it to drive down the overall cost of land, which is good for developers and builders. Expanding the supply of buildable land means there's less competition among developers for each individual property. They can all expect to pay less for the land they consume as a result.

As homeowners sell off their more valuable properties to builders who turn them into denser developments, one would expect the overall price of shelter to fall to the ultimate benefit of new homebuyers.

Trump is given to zero-sum thinking in so many policy areas, and housing is no exception.

Supply-side reformers shouldn't make the same error when advocating for policies that lower the cost of housing. Free markets in housing will be good for everyone.


Wildfire Rebuild Preemption

There is one area of the country where Trump is eager to see housing get built: Los Angeles.

Last Tuesday, the president issued an executive order that preempts local and state permitting requirements for federally assisted wildfire rebuild projects in the Los Angeles area.

The order says that property owners receiving federal disaster benefits can skip these local processes and instead self-certify to a federal designee that they're in compliance with applicable building codes.

Such sweeping federal preemption is a pretty remarkable and unique means of speeding up the painfully slow wildfire rebuilding process.

Last January, wildfires burned down some 13,000 residential properties in the larger L.A. metro area.

It wasn't until November 2025 that the city granted the first certificate of occupancy for a wildfire rebuild. According to the Associated Press, only about 900 homes are under construction.

Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass and Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom have on the one hand attempted to streamline the permitting process by waiving some regulations and fees.

Instead of finally sending to Congress the federal relief Los Angeles needs to rebuild from last year's firestorms, Donald Trump continues to live in fantasy land.

Mr. President, you can actually speed up recovery by providing the assistance that survivors have been waiting for. https://t.co/0cSvoUkkMC

— Governor Gavin Newsom (@CAgovernor) January 27, 2026

On the other hand, they've also suspended laws and issued new regulations that prevent property owners from selling off their land or rebuilding their properties as larger, denser developments.

Both expressed deep objections to Trump's efforts to suspend local and state permitting requirements generally.

Whether the president can unilaterally preempt local land-use regulations for projects making use of federal funds is questionable legally.

"This is completely unprecedented in terms of the history of federal disaster aid," Daniel Farber, faculty director of the Center for Law, Energy, & the Environment at U.C. Berkeley Law, told Politico. "They're gonna have a hard time making this stand up in court."

Legal or not, it will be interesting to see local and state officials argue in court that the wildfire rebuilding process should take longer.


Quick Links

  • A new bipartisan bill in Congress would make it easier for federal infrastructure loans to support transit-oriented development.
  • The Senate has approved an appropriations bill that would increase federal housing funding to $77 billion, or roughly a 10 percent increase from the previous year.
  • Bloomberg has a comprehensive look at Trump's faltering affordable housing agenda.
  • Preliminary data suggest that homelessness fell in 2025. The past several years have seen an unprecedented rise in homelessness rates, driven largely by an influx of migrants into big city shelter systems.

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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NEXT: How To Speed Up the Search for Cures Through a Change in Probability Theory

Christian Britschgi is a reporter at Reason.

Housing PolicyZoningAffordable HousingDonald TrumpCaliforniaNatural Disasters
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  1. jonnysage   2 months ago

    Its only a win for a homeowner if you own the land being upzoned and want to sell it. What if you dont want to sell it? What if you live next to it? Hows my property value (or my peace and quiet) when they build 100 houses or 1000 apts behind my house which used to be forest? Hows my taxes to support all those lower income renters? Hows traffic? Crime? Noise? We know what dense urban delivers.

    1. MasterThief   2 months ago

      Britches isn't interested in your opinion unless you want to live in an urban hellscape. He certainly tries to sell Marxist goals with some shallow "free market" platitudes.

    2. charliehall   2 months ago

      Only grifters want government to increase their property values.

    3. charliehall   2 months ago

      You could buy the forest. If you can't afford it, sorry, but the free market has spoken.

      1. SCOTUS gave JeffSarc a big sad   2 months ago

        Nothing Governor McGreasy is doing has a fucking thing to do with the free market you retard.

      2. jonnysage   2 months ago

        My city,county, state, country owns it. Which is me. The minority is coming in in the name of housing equity to pave it put more tenements up. Thats not free markets.

  2. TJJ2000   2 months ago

    Governor Newsoms post paraphrased, "GIVE CA THE FEDERAL $! WE DON'T WANT ABILITY TO BUILD! WE WANT THE THEFT-$ OF THE WHOLE F'EN NATION!"

    1. TJJ2000   2 months ago

      "We're not going to destroy the value of their homes so that somebody who didn't *work very hard* can buy a home," said Trump...

      The NERVE of Trump to require *EARNING* a house in complete contradiction of Newsom who just wants to *STEAL* Federal $. /s

  3. Gaear Grimsrud   2 months ago

    "The past several years have seen an unprecedented rise in homelessness rates, driven largely by an influx of migrants into big city shelter systems."
    Wow. Nobody saw that coming. But NYC has found a solution. Hypothermia. It's a win/win.

    1. MasterThief   2 months ago

      Oof. Is that a news story right now? Sometimes natural selection needs to be allowed to run its course, but that does suck to hear of a lot of people freezing on the streets.

    2. charliehall   2 months ago

      More people have died from hypothermia in the current cold snap (13) than from homicide (12) in January in NYC. The homicide rate has never been this low in NYC, ever.

      1. EISTAU Gree-Vance   2 months ago

        You’re welcome.

      2. SCOTUS gave JeffSarc a big sad   2 months ago

        You should thank ICE, and Trump.

    3. damikesc   2 months ago

      It's amazing that a multi-million dollar NGO set-up for homelessness is not in Christian's opinion to be a massive obstacle to fixing the problem.

      Nothing guarantees a problem not getting fixed than people making a living off of the problem.

  4. JFree   2 months ago

    Land is rarely win-win. Esp housing which is not a productive investment that builds wealth unlike say building a factory. Anything that encourages someone to buy a house in place X reduces the likelihood that they will buy a house in place Y thus reducing the house price potential in place Y.

    The major purpose of zoning is to give someone in place Y veto power over what is developed in place X. And zoning leads to reduced new supply. Everywhere - if zoning is everywhere.

    1. charliehall   2 months ago

      There are a few places without zoning. Houston is one. If you love sprawl and traffic, you will love Houston.

      1. JFree   2 months ago

        Houston doesn't have zoning but they have dozens of different things that usually achieve the same thing.

  5. Incunabulum   2 months ago

    "Allowing more homes?"

    Are you suggesting the federal government take over local zoning and building codes?

    1. SCOTUS gave JeffSarc a big sad   2 months ago

      In California’s case, I support Trump putting much of the state under martial law, and many prominent democrats detained indefinitely. Maybe charge them with parading, and hold them without bail for three or four years.

    2. JFree   2 months ago

      It won't happen here but Japan has achieved 'affordable housing' with a national zoning code. 12 zones but the limitation is on industry and commerce not residential. Residential can be built in the industrial/commercial zones. It's what allows the repurposing of decrepit uses - malls and now office buildings - into residential.

  6. damikesc   2 months ago

    What evidence does Christian have in regards to Gavin and Bass trying to do ANYTHING to speed up the rebuilding?

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