After the Bubble: A New Direction for Housing

by: Drum Major Institute

Thu Jul 02, 2009 at 09:39


Originally posted by John Petro at DMIBlog.

The housing bubble provided some clear indicators that there is something wrong with our current patterns of housing development. The suburban sprawl model that fueled the growth of many Sunbelt economies, from South Florida to Phoenix to southern California, sputtered out, leaving foreclosed homes, half-finished developments, and never-filled strip malls in its wake. It is difficult to determine cause and effect, but it is clear that the financial crisis had its roots in the wave of foreclosures that has swept the country.

But, according to Joel Kotkin, once the dust settles we should just continue on our current trajectory. Kotkin believes that a "renewed quest for homeownership could underpin a sustainable recovery."

However, there is nothing sustainable about our current housing model. It has real costs on our pocketbooks, our economy, and our environment. The Economist seems to agree.

More in the extended entry.

Drum Major Institute :: After the Bubble: A New Direction for Housing

The Economist mentions that the housing bubble destroyed about $4 trillion in wealth before concluding, "[Policymakers'] efforts in the past few years seem to have weakened, though not destroyed, the best arguments for treating home ownership as something to be encouraged: that it increases people's savings and creates better neighborhoods for everyone."

Kotkin doesn't take kindly to this type of advice. He sees this type of critique as a way for "new urbanists", "big-city theoreticians", and even "the fashion police" to force people out of their leafy bungalows and into drab apartment blocks. He seems to be defending homeownership, but really he's defending suburbs.

So this is where Kotkin confuses his argument. He mixes up the concepts of homeownership versus renting and suburban sprawl versus transit-oriented development.

I've argued before that we need a more balanced housing policy, one that looks at renting as a viable option for building wealth, but not that we should restrict access to homeownership. I've also argued that we need to be building higher-density housing developments in order to increase affordability, link households to jobs, and to tackle climate change.

Luckily, some members of the administration have also sensed that the wind has changed direction. Earlier this year, HUD and the Department of Transportation announced a partnership that would "help American families gain better access to affordable housing, more transportation options, and lower transportation costs." The focus is on coordinating federal transportation and housing investments in order to drive down the two highest costs for households, their housing and their transportation.

However, the need for diversity in our housing stock isn't just an affordability issue or an environmental issue. It's also a matter of providing choices for individuals and families. Would more Americans choose to ditch the car and take transit if that option is available? Yes. Would more Americans choose to live closer in to the central city and cut down on their commuting time if more housing was available in central neighborhoods? Yes. Would this lead to a cleaner environment? Yes. Would it lead to a healthier populace? Yes.

Would it lead to, as Kotkin surmises, "declining living standards and a return to feudalism"? No.


Tags: , , (All Tags)
Print Friendly View Send As Email
Nice in theory (0.00 / 0)
I'm not saying anything you propose is wrong, but trying to fix policy around housing is like the tail trying to wag the dog.  People don't choose to live in the suburbs because they like suburbs.  The ones I know -- myself included -- move there because they want schools for their kids that are safe, modern, well-staffed and offer academic opportunity.

When urban schools get fixed, then you will lure mainstream, parenting-age adults back to the cities.  The market will take care of itself.

And that doesn't mean magnet schools and academies where demand exceeding available seats requires lotteries, or queuing up for hours like they're waiting for concert tickets. Parents of school-age kids are inherently conservative about their kids in that most want a sure thing.

I don't know what city has model urban schools that are accessible.  Where good schools blossom in urban environments, word spreads quickly, and housing values in their districts skyrocket, thus limiting access.  Or limited access gets imposed through lotteries and lines.

Suburban sprawl continues to exist because the sacrifices families make, like living a long way from work, are seen as the path of least resistance for access to good schools.  I wouldn't even call it unsustainable.  It's sustainable as long as families can find ways to make it sustainable for their individual circumstances.


You're off base too (0.00 / 0)
In 1980 urban blight and poverty may have been the force keeping the middle class out.  Now it is gentrification by the upper class,  and the high housing prices, they create.  Reducing the status of the financial service industry in American life will bring those prices down nicely.

The bailouts kept this group in place as Americas most over valued over paid group.  


[ Parent ]
"the financial chrisis had it's roots in the wave of foreclosures" (0.00 / 0)
This is just not true. The foreclosures were/are a result of banking run amock. Which is the result of deregulation and not keeping regulation up with the latest gimmics the banksters devised. Which is the result of unrestrained radical right wing aristrocratic policy (as in the modern rape-public-can party) favoring the greed of the few over the needs of the many..... Until these actions and policies are reversed, there can be NO recovery!

Government by organized money is no better than government by organized mob..... FDR

Good Idea (0.00 / 0)
The future of housing has to be seriously reformed. Americans are so used to the ever expanding suburbs as the ideal even when those suburbs create hour or longer commutes to the cities. DMI lists affordability, cleaner environment, and healthier lifestyles as reasons to re-consider the sprawl and they are all good reasons.

Kotkin's think tank is funded (0.00 / 0)
by walmart.  They don't do well in non sprawl environments.

It saddens me, that he is the only blogger paying attention to the affordable housing issue, though.


Suburbs are where people are forced to go (0.00 / 0)
In 99% of America the local government mandates that auto-dependent sprawl is the ONLY legal way to build housing. When urbanists ask that urbanism be (GASP) allowed to be built, schmucks like Kotkin claim urbanist are "forcing people" into cities. The nerve! I am sick of the oil, auto, and Wal-mart apologists demand that anything but a single family house with 4 parking space be made illegal, and then calling that "Freedom!"

I want urbanism to be a legal choice, that is all. As radical as that may be.







Donate to Open Left




blog advertising is good for you
blog advertising is good for you
USER MENU

SEARCH

   

Advanced Search