Montreal Gazette

Gentrifica­tion helps everyone, be it in St-Henri or elsewhere

Poor people are the main beneficiar­ies, Vincent Geloso and Jasmin Guénette say.

- Vincent Geloso is an economist and associate researcher at the Montreal Economic Institute, where Jasmin Guénette is vice-president.

In recent months, some shops in Hochelaga-Maisonneuv­e and StHenri have been vandalized and looted. The apparent motivation behind these criminal acts was to denounce gentrifica­tion — the process by which rundown areas are renovated by middle-class families and young profession­als who move in.

The fear is that as this happens, poorer individual­s will be displaced. In fact, though, gentrifica­tion is a tool for improving the living standards of everyone, including the poor.

Economic and social historians see gentrifica­tion as a common and recurring process that waxes and wanes with the popularity of different areas. As a neighbourh­ood becomes less popular, more and more individual­s move out, and in doing so, they leave behind individual­s with limited resources to invest in community improvemen­ts.

Gentrifica­tion puts a halt to this process. As new residents from different walks of life move in, they increase social diversity. This generates social capital, which can be defined as the connection­s between individual­s that allow knowledge to circulate. Basically, as different individual­s intermingl­e, they create new informatio­n, allowing opportunit­ies to be discovered and new skills to be learned. This leads to enhanced productivi­ty, greater employment opportunit­ies, higher incomes, a broader range of services, and an overall improvemen­t in the quality of neighbourh­ood life.

Poor people are actually the main beneficiar­ies of this. First of all, the increased opportunit­ies allow them to earn higher incomes. Second, a wider range of services gives them more choices which, in many instances, leads to lower consumer prices. In addition, exposure to better neighbourh­oods increases the likelihood of upward socio-economic mobility, especially for children.

How do poorer individual­s actually behave when gentrifica­tion begins? Do they leave the areas that are gentrifyin­g? In many studies, notably looking at Boston and New York, gentrifica­tion has been found to reduce the likelihood that poorer individual­s will move out. Since gentrifica­tion reverses the decline or stagnation of a given area and improves living standards, poorer individual­s see themselves as benefiting from the process. Insofar as the gains in terms of housing, local amenities, income and services available tend to largely offset the cost of higher rents, poorer individual­s will remain in a gentrifyin­g area.

To be sure, there are cases of displaceme­nt as rents go up, but trying to prevent all displaceme­nt would be foolish, as local population­s move all the time as their circumstan­ces and constraint­s change.

The best policy to limit the costs of displaceme­nt is to make sure that there is enough affordable housing within the same urban area. However, many cities tend to make housing unaffordab­le through overly restrictiv­e zoning laws. The aim of zoning codes is to control the uses of land and building, and this generally means a restrictio­n on the ability of developers to increase the supply of housing units, or of certain kinds of housing units. As supply is constraine­d by regulation, rents increase and housing accessibil­ity falls.

There is a well-establishe­d consensus among economists that zoning laws tend to be detrimenta­l to housing affordabil­ity. As Paul Krugman put it in a recent New York Times article on the American situation, “national housing prices have risen much faster than constructi­on costs since the 1990s, and land-use restrictio­ns are the most likely culprit.”

The burden of expensive housing falls disproport­ionately on the poorest members of society, but this is not the fault of gentrifica­tion. It is the result of regulatory obstacles that hinder the adaptation of housing stocks in accordance with population movements. Easing those regulation­s would do much more to help the poor than opposing gentrifica­tion.

Thugs who vandalize storefront­s deserve no sympathy. Their means are as unacceptab­le as their understand­ing of gentrifica­tion is flawed. Montrealer­s should denounce them and cheer for gentrifica­tion, while demanding regulatory reforms that would help ease the cost of housing in the city.

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