The Volokh Conspiracy
Mostly law professors | Sometimes contrarian | Often libertarian | Always independent
Land-Use Restrictions Cause Housing Shortages in Britain, too
As in the US, they often block the building of new housing in response to demand.

As I have often emphasized in various writings here at the Volokh Conspiracy and elsewhere, zoning restrictions on housing construction greatly increase the cost of housing in much of the United States, and block millions of people from moving to areas with greater job opportunities. In a recent column in the Financial Times, prominent British economic policy commentator Martin Wolf describes how the UK suffers from much the same problem:
Here are two facts about land use in England: houses and gardens occupy just 5.9 per cent of available land; and land with permission to develop can be worth 100 times as much as land without it. The notion that there is a shortage of land for additional housing is ludicrous. Moreover, the planning system is much the biggest market distortion in the economy: it is throttling supply, to the benefit of homeowners, who have made huge unearned gains. In a column on 21 March, I argued that inadequate supply explained why house prices had risen so much in some parts of the country…..
Almost all the debate is cast in Soviet terms: "need", not demand, and numbers of units, not prices. But market signals are telling us that the public wants more land in residential use, which is vastly more valuable to them than in its main current use, agriculture….
We need to introduce a presumption for development based on three considerations: the value of a piece of land when developed, against its value in current use; its amenity value in current use; and the cost of providing needed infrastructure. Where the first greatly outweighs the second plus third, development should not only be allowed, but mandated…
In a previous column, published on March 21, Wolf explains how land-use restrictions cut off many Britons from moving to areas with greater job opportunities - much like zoning does in the United States. Unlike Wolf, I would not go so far as to "mandate" development. But the rest of his reform agenda for Britain makes excellent sense. It is, in fact, similar to that of the cross-ideological zoning reform movement in the United States: lift restrictions that prevent the construction of new housing in response to demand. Doing that can simultaneously increase economic growth, eliminate a major infringement on private property rights, and expand opportunity for the poor and racial minorities.
In a commentary on Wolf's article, economist Alex Tabarrok describes how the problems highlighted by Wolf exist not only in the US and Britain, but also in many other places around the world, including Canada and India. As Tabarrok puts it, all of these jurisdictions would do well to "deregulate the market for land."
Editor's Note: We invite comments and request that they be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of Reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
Ilya needs to post the video of his arguing these great points in his own neighborhood. Until that is posted, he should be ignored. He wants to destroy the quality of life for other people, but not for himself. NY developers came to a PA suburb and turned it into another Democrat shithole.
People have individualized ideas of "quality of life" which vary throughout life; land use restrictions make satisfaction pretty damned unlikely. Like everything else government touches, its regulations are "one size fits nobody", while markets allow everybody to find their own satisfaction, or as close to it as they are willing to invest time and work to create or search for. Unless, of course, you are an unrepentant statist, whose only satisfaction comes from forcing everybody else to accept your quality of life standards.
4000 families moved into my county from Democrat shithole Philly in 2020. They agreed.
If you just go around talking to them, they will all leave in a hurry.
My argument to Ilya is about hypocrisy. I will stop making personal remarks when he posts a recording of his making his arguments where he lives. We can then move to arguments over utilitarian calculations.
Absolutely 100% agreement with DaivdBehar on this one!!!
I live in the great State of Northern Virginia and if anyone is interested in hands-off land development, then come here and see how destructive this approach is.
Prof. Somin is only interested in land development and conveniently ignores the rest of the story: increased housing means increased need for EVERYTHING else.
Fire stations
Schools
ROADS
Strip malls
TRAFFIC
Difficult to make appointments (Dr, Dentist, etc.)
I leave the house at 5 am for work and the roads are already packed.
Drove theough there recently. The tall cranes are like a forest. That is where the rent seekers of DC live. In 2008, housing prices dropped 30%. Not there. Rent seeking is good business. I am guessing Ilya lives there. He is personally suffering from his owm policies. That would be justice.
It is paradise compared to other Dem jurisdictions like NYC or San Fran. Nothing works. Try to cash a check. It takes 3 hours, if you are lucky to not get attacked. Crime is 10 times higher than recorded. If a cop takes your report and fails to throw it in the trash, fired. Welcome to Ilya's hellscape.
Land use restrictions don't fix most of these things. Just look at the Bay Area, where it's been nearly impossible to create new housing. Arguably the wealthy suburbs have done a good job with schools, but the roads/strip malls/traffic situation is not any better than other places (traffic has gotten egregiously bad over the past 10 years).
No empirical data one way or the other, but I'd argue that land use restrictions make the "difficult appointment" problem worse, not better. It makes it harder to put businesses in the right places to match demand, and the high housing prices make it less attractive for new professionals to move into the area.
Road construction is easy to put off. When the road is built 30 years too late it doesn't handle all the built up demand so people claim induced demand always makes roads useless. And they put off the next road even longer.
With new development come new property and income taxes.
The same thing is happening in Israel. Housing prices are insane, and young people are actually emigrating because they can't find affordable housing, because the government owns almost all the land and refuses to release it for development.
A show about hoouse hunters visited Israel. The tour of each place included a visit to the bomb shelter in each apartment.
Israel should get more sophisticated. It is killing Hamas leaders. They are fungible employees. They should kill the thug oligarchs behind Hamas, wherever they are in the world.
The other reason Ilya is wrong is evident on a cross country flight at night. The areas with lights are the tiniest sliver of our land rich country. We could have a billion population and still cover the tiniest fraction of the land mass.
Driving today is stupid and should be almost a crime. You should be able to do a lot from a spacious home away from the Dem shithole cities. Say one has no income. Live in a $10000 used trailer in the woods. Life is pretty good. Our poorest have a better life than the rich of Europe. All American misery is self inflicted, most often by the toxic lawyer profession. Since Ilya is a lawyer, his best policy decision would be to STFU. Almost everything a lawyer says is stupid. Do the opposite for a good decision.
It might not be obvious from across the ocean quite what the problem is here in the UK.
Very simply, something like a third of the UK's population has moved south in the last century or so. Almost no new housing has been permitted to be built to accommodate that. Therefore the area around London has become ridiculously expensive.
Even better, there's no good way to fix it, because a large portion of the country has poured almost all their money into their houses, out of necessity, and everyone expects to be able to cash that out at some point for something like what they put in. It's going to take decades to unwind.
When they allow huge apartment blocks, the value of homes will drop by a third. That is a transfer of wealth from hard working productive people, to tax sucking parasites by a Marxist government. The politicians and their oligarchic overlords should be targeted.
Markov chain bots haven't been funny in years.