Title: GGR%20357%20H1F%20Geography%20of%20Housing%20and%20Housing%20Policy
1GGR 357 H1F Geography of Housing and Housing
PolicyÂ
Session 7 Access to housing Housing
allocation June 9, 2008
DR. AMANDA HELDERMAN
2Announcements
- Web page http//individual.utoronto.ca/helderman
- Midterm answers and last weeks lecture slides
are available - Midterm preliminary results available
3Announcements
- Available for you to pick up at the office in Sid
Smith - This years results
- Lowest 22 highest 88 average 52 mode 39
median 49 - Last years results
- Lowest 52.5 highest 91 average 68.8 mode 64
median 67.5 - No make up test
- Requests to redistribute the weights of the exams
and assignment based on official documents only
(such as a UofT doctors note)
4Announcements
- Class representative APUS
- http//www.apus.utoronto.ca/
- Summer students taking 1.0 credit or less (one
course for one term only ? representative for the
whole summer, until August. - Tuition freeze, university/gvt financial aid for
part-time students, on-campus housing for
part-time students, family care, and summer/
evening course selection - Representatives receive periodic information and
keep their class mates informed - Feedback to APUS you might receive from class
mates - NOMINATIONS?
- QUESTIONNAIRES
5Housing allocation, introduction
- The distribution of housing among social groups/
households in a given location - Housing allocation mechanisms are parts of
housing systems - They divide housing across the population
- Interesting process, because both market and
government have responsibilities - They have differently prioritized, but some
common, goals! - Different mechanisms that steer the process
6Housing allocation
- Two principle domains housing allocation through
the private market and through the public sector - Most countries have a mixture of these two
mechanisms - Even within countries, actual systems of
allocation differ widely - Many systems, different scales, different stocks,
different dynamics, different demands
7The private market
- Mechanism competition or price
- Price is determined by the values that people
attach to housing and their ability to pay - The functioning of the market is based on the
financial resources of firms and their
willingness to produce housing for profit - Main objectives are efficiency, maximizing output
and minimizing excess prices and rents
8The public sector
- Governments, housing officials and community
groups are the main providers and allocators in
this sector - Mechanism competition and cooperation
- The mechanism is based on individual and
collective needs (social priorities) - The functioning of the mechanism depends on the
objectives of the agency involved - Main objectives are a greater equity or social
welfare, and assuring adequate housing for all
9Goals of efficiency and equity
- Both consider efficiency and equity important
- The public and the private sector handle their
and each others main goals with different
criteria (costs, prices, stock attributes)
10Efficiency
- Private market minimizing aggregate housing
prices and rents, maximizing output and profits,
and maintaining rates of return - Public sector maximizing the use of the housing
stock, minimizing administrative costs,
maintaining adequate stock
11Equity
- Private market allocation
- no one can move without making others worse off
- price restricts over-consumption
- Public sector allocation
- assuring adequate housing for all
- treating all equally according to their needs
12Type of allocation system
- Mix between private and public
- Ranging from laissez-faire to centrally planned
society
13Collusion
- Oxfords dictionary a secret agreement for a
fraudulent purpose - In this context Acting together to exclude
others - A private factor that both the private market and
the public sector have to deal with - In private market exclude from the neighbourhood
for example - In public sector more subtle altering of the
location of public housing or altering waiting
lists
14Functioning of the allocation system
- How are criteria established?
- Are the criteria explicit?
- Implicit ? discrimination
15Monitoring mechanisms
- What mechanisms are used to monitor changes in
preferences, needs, and supply? - Goal of both private and public parties match
between households and the housing stock - What information is needed? How is the
information collected? - By whom is the information collected?
- Signals ? Measures
16Implementation of changes
- The information available may indicate changes
- Such changes demand implementation of measures to
keep matching households and housing - Carrot Stick subsidies persuasion or higher
rents
17Housing markets
- Economic market set within a political framework
- Set of institutions and procedures, bringing
together housing supply and demand for purposes
of exchanging housing services - Actors sellers, buyers, renters, landlords,
builders, consumers - No single geographic place
- Buyers move to goods instead of vice versa
18Types of housing markets
- Scale
- Macro housing sector of the national economy is
studied by the relationship between rate of
investment in supply and aggregate expenditures
of households - Micro behaviour of individuals is studied by the
spatial expression of matching supply and demand - Location of control (private or public)
- Tenure type
- Age of housing and position in the market
(sectoral/ submarkets)
19The urban housing market
- A continuous geographic area, more or less
clearly bounded, within which a household may
trade or substitute one dwelling for another
without altering place of work or pattern of
social contacts - The spatial extent of the substitution of housing
- No discrete spatial boundaries
- The housing market perceived by developers, not
households, is larger and may constitute of
various metropolitan areas
20The market mechanism
- Dominant mechanism in North-America
- The market has a supply (housing units and their
attributes) and a demand (households and their
attributes) - Asking prices versus bid prices
21Micro-economic approach
- Allocation starts as to achieve market clearing
solution (everything is matched) - Efficiency minimizes over- and under-consumption
- Total rents and prices are at a minimum
- Optimal no household could be assigned better
without making others becoming worse off - Disadvantage Static!
- This model does not allow for change or diversity
in behaviour
22 behavioural elements
- There are different perceptions of the market
that reflect in varying asking prices and bid
prices - The process describes a convergence of asking and
bid prices until a sale price is reached - This may take hours, days, weeks, months, years!
- The market circumstances influence the sale price
- A dynamic or tight market (few vacancies and high
and rising prices) may lead to bid prices that
exceed the asking prices - Conversely, in a slow market there may not be a
convergence and property may even be withdrawn
23Cost of realizing housing
- Input of land and input of non-land
- If the input of land is relatively high lower
density, single family homes will be more likely
realized - If the input of land is relatively low higher
density housing, multi-family homes
24Cost of land versus other expenses
25Segmented markets
- Quasi-independent subdivisions of an urban
housing market - A-spatial and spatial submarkets
- Homogenous clusters of housing types, and/or
household characteristics - Unique set of prices/ rents with little
substitution of one unit for another - Because of size/heterogeneity, diversity of
demand, barriers and disequilibria in the market - Consequences price premium/ discount that
reflect geographic differences
26Segment criteria
- Submarkets by tenure classes, structure types
and values - Households income, family type, race or ethnic
origin - Locations by status inner city, inner suburban
and outer suburban
27Decision-making micro level
- Complex process
- What type of housing, where, what can the
household afford - Not the nominal price is the most important on
the market, but monthly out-of-pocket expenses! - Housing is demolished or added to the stock
- Households form, dissolve or decease
28Constraints on the housing market
- Constraints may be the result of
- Supply restrictions availability type of housing
- Accessibility restrictions benefit from unique
location - Neighbourhood restrictions small areas that are
especially (un)attractive, premium or discount
price - Institutional restrictions redlining, building
codes, zoning, planning regulations - Racial, ethnic and class discrimination limits
search - Information restrictions differential access to
information on the housing market
29Result of constraints on housing market
- Prices paid may be more than expected for similar
housing in a different area - Movements between areas are less than may have
been predicted
30Allocation and class
- Housing allocation is always founded by class
conflicts, according to Weber and others - The class struggle in capitalist societies
reflects the social structure of the city - This struggle is caused by differential means to
access the housing market, by wide differences in
income - Castells (1975) access to housing not only
depends on income, but also on access to credit
and thus the predictability of future income - The ability to use the system may be culturally
determined
31The institutional context
- Spectrum of administrators, politicians,
technicians in the housing field gate keepers
who effectively determine who gets what from the
housing market and where (Pahl, 1976) - Critical role of mortgage lending institutions
- Government policy rent control, growth
development of housing stocks, and fiscal measures
32CMHC
- Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation (CMHC),
active since 1946 - Canadas national housing association
- Mostly concentrated on the owner-occupied segment
of the market - Provider of mortgage loan insurance,
mortgage-backed securities, housing policy and
programs, and housing research - Until 1966, CMHC set the interest rates! (Now it
is market determined) - Public mortgage insurance was the corner stone of
post war housing policy and remains important
today
33CMHC
- CMHC works to enhance Canada's housingfinance
options, assist Canadians who cannot afford
housing in the private market, improve building
standards and housing construction, and provide
policymakers with the information and analysis
they need to sustain a vibrant housing market in
Canada. - Informative website, good source of information
http//www.cmhc-schl.gc.ca.
34The public allocation system in Canada
- Welfare pluralism centralized welfare system has
been superseded a decentralized system - Proliferation of agents much variation in the
allocation of public housing, social housing and
assisted market housing - Top down ? bottom up
- Policy drift local outcomes may be a far cry
from program intentions - Mutual shaping takes place
- Third sector housing provision
35Recent history of housing allocation programs
- Requests for public housing came from
municipalities - Federal and provincial governments were in
control of every stage of implementation - 1970s and 1980s were characterized by increasing
decentralization and a shift from public housing
to nonprofits - Shift was based on concern that low-income
residents were getting concentrated and
stigmatized
36Recent history of housing allocation programs
- Yearly unit allocations (6000-30,000 for ON)
under non-profit programs in the second half of
the 1980s and 1990s. - Usually, the units were allocated to third sector
- The programs often were targeted to certain
people (disabled), certain types of household
(singles), or geographic areas - Ministries would give the project sponsors and
others clear instructions as to the application
process and the target groups
37Housing allocation programs
- Federal and provincial negotiations produced a
fair share allocation model (16 target areas)
based on waiting lists, turnover units and the
concept of core need (suitable housing not
available within 30 income range) - Market rent units were allocated based on
negotiations with sponsor groups - The 1990s were characterized by required skills
developed within the Ministry of Housing (ON) - Good quality proposals from third parties
38Welfare pluralism
- Local third sector carrying out programs designed
at a higher level welfare pluralism - Significant delivery mode
- Allocation is getting closer to targets
throughout the year perhaps because of
development of skills with program implementation
in and outside the Ministries
39The case of the Netherlands
- Production and allocation of housing
traditionally firmly in the hands of public
agencies (municipality level, mostly) - Long tradition of housing allocation systems,
especially of inexpensive part of stock - The system of government control was developed to
respond to acute housing shortages (WWII) - Qualifying households for new construction
- Who would be allowed to live there?
- How to rank households on the waiting list?
40The Netherlands
- Allocation controls not equally strict for all
types of housing - Even if allocation of private housing is not
strictly controlled by the government, municipal
regulation did often dictate the households to
which a landlord may rent his property - 1960s and 1970s shortage had subsided ? rents
deregulated and allocation controls abolished - Return to free market principles to decrease the
burden of housing subsidies, but not without
putting production stimuli in place
41The 1990s and after
- Distribution model starts with registration of
housing candidates on the waiting lists - BASICS OF MOST SYSTEMS
- Eligible criteria to register for (socially)
rented housing must be met by households - Reshuffling of the waiting list by ranking the
applicants, based on score card - Points are awarded according to household and
current housing situation, and the duration of
registration
42Distribution model
- 4. Vacant dwelling offered to the individual with
the most points - 5. Three suitability criteria relationship
household size and housing type, relationship
income and price dwelling, and suitability in
terms of ties with the neighbourhood, among other
things (emplacement policy sanctions deviation
from the waiting list and exclusion of groups)
43Distribution model
- Drawbacks little freedom of choice and long,
passive, waiting periods - New emphasis in government services on customer
and choice in public services - Towards more market-oriented social housing
sector - A new allocation model choice based letting
model - Shift from need to choice
44Choice based letting model
- House seekers may react to vacancies advertized,
but only those deemed suitable for them - Criteria length of residence, duration of
registration, and age (and what type of dwelling
the house seeker may leave behind) - Vacancy will be offered to the household that
ranks the highest, and this person may accept of
reject - Passed on to the next applicant on the ranking
- After selection of tenant, rankings are
published, so that other applicants may see how
well they did
45Choice based letting model
- The new model is more appreciated by home seekers
- Current debates
- To what extent may local authorities give
priority to local home seekers? - How does preferential treatment for local home
seekers relate to European Union regulations that
EU residents have the right of free movement and
residence?
46The supply model
- Variant to choice model!
- Housing is advertised
- Registration by home seekers
- Home seekers must react to ads
- Sequence criteria longest registration duration
or duration of stay in previous dwelling - Suitability criteria least expensive dwellings
for lowest-income families, large dwellings for
larger households, present income is decisive
47Advantages of supply model
- Transparent, results can be checked
- More objective, less discriminating or exclusive
than distribution model
48Different historic context of the Dutch case
- Motivation government to intervene economic
recovery after WWII - Large social housing stock (2002 35, within
inner city of Amsterdam in 1970s 80) - Very small private rented housing stock (2002
10) - In countries with a small social rented stock,
the choice letting model would be much less
relevant!
49Historic context of the Dutch case
- Housing market remains unbalanced, so government
keeps intervening - Shift in emphasis towards free market would not
solve problems without creating new ones - Housing is considered important in the
functioning of society
50Attention for allocation of rented housing is rare
- A lot of literature on this topic from the
Netherlands - United Kingdom also has a large body of
literature on this topic - Also the only countries that use choice based
allocation models - Ireland and Spain waiting lists are increasingly
replaced by lotteries ? more transparent and
fairer allocation
51Access, exclusion, affordability and allocation
- Housing access decision in literature is not
always separated from housing allocation decision - In the Netherlands they are separate!
52Literature for this session
- Bourne, L.S. (1981), The housing allocation
process and urban housing markets. In The
geography of housing. Chapter 4. p. 69-92. - Hulchanski, D. M. Shapscott (2004),
Introduction finding room in Canadas housing
system for all Canadians. In J.D. Hulchanski
M. Shapcott (eds. 2005), Finding room. Policy
options for a Canadian rental housing strategy.
Chapter 1. p. 3-14.