No Muslims In My Backyard?
Plus: Kamala Harris doubles down on rent control, Gavin Newsom issues a new executive order on housing, and the natural tendency to keep adding more regulation.
Plus: Kamala Harris doubles down on rent control, Gavin Newsom issues a new executive order on housing, and the natural tendency to keep adding more regulation.
It's good to hear a candidate actually talk about our spending problem. But his campaign promises would exacerbate it.
The company needs a lot of government permission slips to build its planned new city in the Bay Area. It's now changing the order in which it asks for them.
With prices skyrocketing, the city is weighing whether to regulate hotels further by barring them from hiring contracted workers.
Plus: Gainesville shrinks minimum lot sizes, a Colorado church can keep providing shelter to the homeless, and Berkeley considers allowing small apartments everywhere.
Many states have enacted laws curbing exclusionary zoning and other regulations that block new housing construction.
Vineyard owners face $120,000 in fines for letting an employee and his family live on their 60-acre property without a permit.
There seems to be general bipartisan agreement on keeping a majority of the cuts, which are set to expire. They can be financed by cleaning out the tax code of unfair breaks.
Whoever is president has very weak incentives to get zoning reform right.
It combines nationwide rent control with modest supply-side measures potentially freeing up "underutilized" federal property for housing construction.
Republicans and Democrats have both managed to get worse on housing policy in the past week.
Although former President Donald Trump's deregulatory agenda would make some positive changes, it's simply not enough.
How do the two major party candidates stack up on housing policy?
Those three presidential candidates are making promises that would have bewildered and horrified the Founding Fathers.
Plus: A disappointing first round of "Baby YIMBY" grant awards, President Joe Biden endorses rent control, and House Republicans propose cutting housing spending.
Notre Dame law Prof. Patrick Reidy argues that religious organizations are entitled to faith-based exemptions from zoning restrictions preventing them from building affordable housing on their land.
Homeless advocates say the court's decision in Grants Pass v. Johnson gives local governments a blank check to "to arrest or fine those with no choice but to sleep outdoors."
The media, state attorneys general, and the Biden administration are blaming rent-recommendation software for rising rents. Normal stories of supply and demand are the more reasonable explanation.
The city's Rent Guidelines Board approved a nominal 2.75 rent increase for one million rent-stabilized apartments. That's below the year's 3.3 percent inflation rate.
There is a growing movement to let churches and other religious organizations build housing on their property that would otherwise be banned by zoning regulations.
Plus: unpermitted ADUs in San Jose, Sen. J.D. Vance's mass deportation plan for housing affordability, and the California Coastal Commission's anti-housing record.
There may not be a perfect solution to ending homelessness, but there are some clear principles to reduce the friction for those working to do so.
It is coauthored with Josh Braver.
Plus: Sen. John Fetterman introduces a new zoning reform bill, U.C. Berkeley finally beats the NIMBYs in court, and Austin's unwise "equity overlay."
Recent studies diverge on the extent to which public opinion backs policies that would deregulate housing construction. YIMBYs would do well to learn from both.
A guest post on economist Bryan Caplan's Bet On It substack.
Plus: An interview with Colorado Gov. Jared Polis about the state's blockbuster year for housing reform.
Moving is no longer a viable way to grow your wealth in the U.S., says the author of Build, Baby, Build.
Plus: The results of rent control are in, California's tiny home program gets minimal results, and yet another city eyes a crackdown on short-term rentals.
Plus: Austin shrinks its minimum lot sizes, Florida builds on past zoning reforms, and Arizona passes ADU and missing middle bills.
A listing of his four posts on different aspects of the book and the issues it raises.
Specificity, fertility, and political assimilation. Fourth in a series of guest-blogging posts.
Price controls lead to the misallocation of resources, shortages, diminished product quality, and black markets.
Checking the credibility of Hsieh-Moretti the lazy way. Third in a series of guest-blogging posts.
The Institute for Justice has launched a project to reform land use regulation.
Plus: Colorado passes a string of zoning reforms, an upscale Los Angeles grocery store sues to stop new housing, and Democrats urge the White House to get moving on fair housing.
Privatization of federal and state land is a massive missed opportunity. Second in a series of guest-blogging posts.
These new regulations will drive up housing costs even further.
Why *Build, Baby, Build* should be a top libertarian priority. First in a series of guest-blogging posts.
The book makes the case for massively deregulating housing markets.
The George Mason University economist talks about his new housing comic book and how America could deregulate its way into an affordable urban utopia.
Restricting the price of housing kills incentives to supply places to live.
A new study shows deportation of undocumented migrants reduces housing construction by diminishing the supply of workers needed to do it.
Plus: California's landmark law ending single-family-only zoning is struck down, Austin, Texas, moves forward with minimum lot size reform, and the pro-natalist case for pedestrian infrastructure.
Kennedy’s plan for government-backed mortgage bonds will do to housing what federal student loans have done to college tuition.
Homeowners associations are the most, and the least, libertarian form of governance.