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GGR 357 H1F Geography of Housing and Housing Policy

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Demographics and housing issues in Torontonian neighbourhoods ... Jenkins, S.P. & A.K. Maynard (1983), Intergenerational continuities in housing. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: GGR 357 H1F Geography of Housing and Housing Policy


1
GGR 357 H1F Geography of Housing and Housing
Policy  
May 14, 2008SESSION 2 TENURE CHOICE AND
SOCIO-ECONOMIC INEQUALITIES
DR. AMANDA HELDERMAN
2
Course web page
  • http//individual.utoronto.ca/helderman/

3
Announcements
  • Text book sale
  • 15.00
  • Exact change only
  • Room 50.57
  • Additional opportunities?

4
Assignment
  • Individually written, unique research paper
  • Demographics and housing issues in Torontonian
    neighbourhoods
  • Immediately relevant topic to this course
    Homelessness - extremely wealthy neighbourhood
    Not appropriate choice of topic for obvious
    reasons
  • Do not exceed 1,500 words!
  • Hard copy and digital copy (word only)
  • ALL RELEVANT LIT SHOULD BE USED!
  • DUE DATE PAPER Friday, June 20, 2008
  • Drop box Office of Geography/ Program in Planning
  • Name student, student number, my name, course

5
Assignment
  • The paper should at least describe the
    demographic, socio-economic and physical
    characteristics of the area
  • Demographic and socio-economic characteristics of
    the neighbourhood http//www.toronto.ca/demograph
    ics/
  • Physical characteristics of the area map
  • Writing courses
  • Be aware of waiting times! Contact the writing
    centre ASAP
  • Assistance from instructor (at least two weeks in
    advance)
  • By providing 1-page draft outline well in advance
    of appointment after class
  • By appointment after class
  • By email Helderman_at_geog.utoronto.ca

6
Assignment
  • Paper preparations very wise of you to start
    exploring paper themes!
  • Assignment description available online
  • Please embed all maps/ tables into the paper
  • Appropriate attention in the text
  • Use of appendices (if useful background
    information)
  • Illustrations for required elements such as
    physical structure (maps) and demographic
    characteristics (tables)

7
Timelines
  • MIDTERM EXAM Monday June 2, 2008, this room
  • DUE DATE PAPER Friday, June 20, 2008
  • Drop box Office of Geography/ Program in Planning
  • Name student, student number, my name, course
  • June 23-27, 2008 FINAL EXAMINATIONS
  • Exact date to be announced

8
Highlights from first session
  • Several slides are worth revisiting
  • Summary first session
  • Definition of housing, complexity concept
  • Importance of housing
  • Modelling housing market behaviour

9
Defining Housing
  • Complexity of housing all alternative
    definitions are applicable at the same time, some
    meanings are separated and confused ?
  • Broad definition BUNDLE OF SERVICES (for
    builders, owners and renters)
  • Physical facility
  • Shelter
  • Consumption of services public, schools,
    environment, etc.
  • Location/ accessibility

10
The services delivered by housing
  • Access to/ occupancy of housing delivers
  • Shelter from the elements
  • Value/ wealth ? equity for owners
  • Shelter from taxes ? e.g. capital
  • Accessibility to services (e.g. schools)
  • Accessibility to work
  • Accessibility to neighbourhood
  • Social status
  • Right to privacy/ exclusion

Services
Role of location!
11
The importance of housing
  • Housing is the built environment for intraurban
    migration and mobility
  • Housing competes with other uses in the urban
    land market for accessibility and space
  • Housing is the principal mechanism through which
    urban neighbourhoods change, and one of the
    stimulants of change (session on neighbourhood
    transitions)
  • Moves of households/ activities, demographic
    change
  • New (demographic/ economic/ social/ cultural)
    developments
  • Aging of real estate
  • Fluctuations in house prices

12
Models for housing market behaviour
  • Traditionally in terms of streams of relocations,
    and origins and destinations (aggregate
    patterns)
  • Gravity models based on the characteristics of
    places
  • Size and distance between places
  • Push/pull models based on flows of individuals,
    decisions
  • (Recurrent) Markov Chains based on matching
    process between households and housing
  • Two more recent approaches
  • Micro-economic approaches (Sjaastad) based on
    the costs and returns of human migration
    (monetary and non-monetary costs)
  • Life cycle/ Life course perspective based on
    life events that trigger a change in one of the
    parallel careers, individual and micro-economic

13
Life course, parallel careers
Child birth
Cohabitation
Remarriage
Divorce/ separation
Child birth
Widowhood
HH
Job change
Job change
LB
Enrolling into higher education
ED
HS
14
Life course paradigm shift in the social sciences
New!
  • Convergence of theory and empirical work
  • Devoted attention to the individual household
  • Brought the topic of residential relocations into
    the centre of housing studies
  • Linking individual action with social change and
    social structure
  • Demographic events introduced as milestones and
    critical transitions in peoples lives
  • UNIVERSAL these events apply for almost
    everyone, and occur everywhere and throughout
    history

15
Introduction housing tenure (new topic)
  • Housing tenure choice
  • Individual advantages/ disadvantages to
    homeownership
  • Socio-economic inequalities
  • Separate markets
  • Mechanisms of widening socio-economic gaps

16
Introduction
  • Advantages of homeownership for governments
  • Policy instruments
  • Literature discussion

17
Housing tenure choice
  • 2nd step in the relocation decision
  • (see Brown Moore, 1970)
  • Destination choice models
  • Life course stage
  • Household composition and socio-economic
    characteristics
  • Housing type
  • Level of housing consumption
  • Opportunity structure
  • Local housing stock
  • Local housing market conditions

18
The values of housing
  • Consumption value
  • Investment value
  • Policy importance

19
Means-end model
Basic needs
Values
Goals and objectives
Intentions
Household characteristics
Current situation
Choice behaviour
20
Values and consequences
  • Value
  • Consequence
  • Attribute
  • Privacy
  • More space
  • Five rooms

21
Housing tenure and the life course
  • Some rent while being young
  • while others need rental housing throughout
    their lives.

22
Individual advantages to homeownership
  • Building up equity from a home
  • Housing quality
  • Customized aspects/ alterations
  • Control of individual housing situation/
    independence
  • Continuity/ stability
  • Status
  • Emotional value

23
Individual disadvantages to homeownership
  • Financial risk housing market
  • Financial risk labour market position
  • Responsibility for maintenance
  • Impedes residential relocations
  • Financial commitment
  • Transaction costs
  • Sense of security, personal environment
  • Emotional attachment
  • Stable households

24
Socio-economic inequalities
  • Building up equity
  • Spatial concentration of opportunities
  • Quality of housing and neighbourhoods
  • Social mobility
  • Separate markets

25
Separate markets
  • Few moves between the rented and owner-occupied
    segments
  • Interruption in building up equity
  • Maintaining housing quality
  • Rising incomes and housing consumption needs
    during a large period of an individuals life
    course
  • Equity facilitating new purchase
  • Based on Helderman, 2007

26
Moving from rent to own
  • Increase in housing budget
  • Increase in housing consumption needs
  • Higher quality home
  • Higher quality neighbourhood
  • Personal space, free to adjust to personal
    preferences
  • Preference to own

27
Moving from own to rent
  • Decrease in housing budget
  • Decrease in housing consumption needs
  • Urgent need to relocate
  • Desire to consume equity
  • Preference for renting
  • Motives related to disruptions and changes in the
    family life cycle or life course patterns
    (divorce, separation, aging, health issues,
    change of jobs)

28
Levels of homeownership ()
1991 1996 2001
Montréal 46.7 48.5 50.2
Vancouver 57.5 59.4 61.0
Toronto 57.9 58.4 63.2
Ontario 63.7 64.3 67.8
Canada 62.6 63.6 65.8
From census 1991, 1996 2001 Statistics Canada
29
American dream
  • Active policy
  • Surge mid-1990s
  • From 64 in 1994 to 69 in 2004
  • Homes important part of peoples net worth
  • Affecting peoples spending, working, saving and
    moving decisions
  • Creative financing options/ more flexible
    mortgages available
  • Shift in demographics

30
Trend homeownership US
31
Socio-economic inequalities (2)
  • The income gap
  • Income of owners has increased 5 while income of
    renters has decreased about 4 between 1984-1999
  • The income gap increases 1 per year
  • The gap is widening

32
Income spent on housing
Owners 18
Renters 28
Average 21
33
Socio-economic inequalities (3)
  • The wealth gap
  • The average wealth of homeowners went from 29
    times that of renters to 70 times that of renters
    between 1984-1999
  • Note on average 38 of homeowners wealth is
    tied up in the home
  • The gap is widening

34
Mechanisms of widening socio-economic gaps
  • Increase in house prices
  • Increase in rents
  • Government policy

35
Advantages of homeownership for governments
  • Stimulate individuals building up equity from
    their homes
  • Stimulate capital markets
  • Increase supply of higher quality, owner-occupied
    housing stock
  • More adequate match of supply and demand
  • Flexibility of labour markets? (Oswald, 1999
    Helderman, 2006)

36
Policy instruments
  • 1) Tax incentives
  • No tax on capital gains from house sales
  • RRSP Home Buyers Plan (HBP)
  • Flexible Down Payment Plan
  • Lower Monthly Payments
  • Purchase Plus Improvements
  • Land Transfer Tax (LTT) Rebate
  • No housing related tax concessions for renters!
  • Ontario waives land transfer taxes, may in theory
    be beneficial to both owner-occ. and rent.

37
Policy instruments (2)
  • 2) Subsidies
  • 3) Rent control
  • 4) Municipal regulations
  • Key The ability to pay rents. The question
    remains
  • ? What would make rental investments sufficiently
    profitable for developers?

38
Literature session 3
  • Hulchanski, J.D. (2005), A tale of two Canadas
    homeowners getting richer, renters getting
    poorer. In J.D. Hulchanski M. Shapcott (eds.
    2005), Finding room. Policy options for a
    Canadian rental housing strategy. Chapter 4. p.
    81-88.
  • Oswald, A.J. (1999), The housing market and
    Europes unemployment a non-technical paper,
    mimeo University of Warwick.
  • Coulson, N.E. Fisher, L.M. (2002), Tenure
    choice and labour market outcomes. Housing
    Studies, 17(1), pp. 35-49.
  • Helderman, A.C. (2007), Once a homeowner, always
    a homeowner? An analysis of moves out of
    owner-occupation. Journal of Housing and the
    Built Environment (22), pp. 239-261.

39
Literature discussion
  • Hulchanski Shapcott, chapter 4
  • Housing tenure represents the divide between the
    two very different types of households in terms
    of income and wealth
  • (Hulchanski, 2004, p. 85)

40
Literature discussion (2)
  • Oswald
  • We can put Europe back to work by reducing
    homeownership
  • (Oswald, 1999, p.2)

Migration (long distance moves) is necessary for
individual flexibility on the labour market so
that advantage may be taken from economic
opportunities (Helderman, 1st class)
41
Literature discussion (3)
  • Why do the papers of Oswald and Coulson Fisher
    have totally separate outcomes?

42
Same hypothesis, different outcomes
  • Methodology bivariate/ multivariate
  • Household situation/ life course stage
  • Dynamic/ static modelling
  • Assumptions general/ partial models
  • Self-selection bias

43
Literature next session Intergenerational
transmission of homeownership
  • - Henretta, J.C. (1984), Parental status and
    childs home ownership. American Sociological
    Review 49, pp. 131-140.
  • - Jenkins, S.P. A.K. Maynard (1983),
    Intergenerational continuities in housing. Urban
    Studies 20, pp. pp. 431-438.

Classics!
44
Literature next session Intergenerational
transmission of homeownership
  • Helderman, A.C. C.H. Mulder (2007),
    Intergenerational transmission of homeownership
    the roles of gifts and continuities in housing
    market characteristics. Urban Studies 44 (2), pp.
    231-247.
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