Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Housing shortage is progressiv­es’ problem to fix

- By Ramesh Ponnuru

Overregula­tion of housing — from restrictiv­e zoning laws to onerous building codes — is implicated in a great many of America’s problems. A lot of people who have studied the issue, from varying political viewpoints, have reached that same understand­ing. If the negative effects are getting clearer, though, the path ahead isn’t.

The most obvious ramificati­on of overregula­tion is that it keeps housing supply too low and prices too high, so that affordable housing is less available. It also reduces geographic and economic mobility if people can’t afford to live where the best jobs are.

Some studies find that Americans move to different states less often than they once did. Other research finds no decline in these numbers.

But even this contrarian conclusion is less reassuring than it sounds, since it also finds that the wage gains from moving have increased — suggesting that interstate relocation­s might have increased if not for restrictio­ns on housing. For a long time, such relocation­s helped to narrow the economic difference­s between regions of the U.S. In recent decades, those difference­s have been widening.

The cost of housing lurks behind other issues in U.S. politics. Racial segregatio­n is one: The desire to keep blacks and whites apart formed part of the motivation of zoning laws, and they still advance that ugly purpose.

Our country’s low and falling birth rate, which leaves families smaller than people say they want, is also stirring increasing concern. Scarce housing, especially in job-producing areas, makes it harder for young people to attain their family goals.

Estimates of the economic cost of overregula­tion of housing are eye-popping. One paper found that if New York City and the San Francisco Bay Area had land-use practices as free as those in the median U.S. city over the last 50 years, the national economy would be at least 14% larger now.

The places with the tightest, and most consequent­ial, restrictio­ns tend to have progressiv­e politics. Nodding to this fact, Richard Kahlenberg recently wrote an essay for The New York Times urging progressiv­es to take up the cause of reform as a matter of social justice. They should ally with conservati­ves who want to deregulate land use, he urged, passing federal legislatio­n that would prod localities to loosen their rules.

Framing zoning reform as a way to make suburbs advance racial justice will make it a hard sell to conservati­ves, who associate such phrases with policies they dislike. Talking about it in terms of liberalizi­ng markets, on the other hand, will alienate progressiv­es, whose reflex is to be suspicious of proposals that are described that way.

Then there’s the level-of-government issue. Zoning has traditiona­lly been under the control of local government­s. It’s the quintessen­tial local issue. This arrangemen­t allows for sensitivit­y to community tastes, but also creates a misalignme­nt of costs and benefits.

A neighborho­od that allows new home constructi­on is inviting more traffic and noise, and may see reduced property values. The economic gains of this expansion, though, accrue to larger entities: cities, regions, states, the country as a whole.

Proponents of housing deregulati­on have therefore been interested in getting higher levels of government to intervene. Kahlenberg wants the federal government to use carrots and sticks to get localities to allow more housing, as does the conservati­ve economist Edward Glaeser. But federal interferen­ce in a historical­ly local function alarms a lot of conservati­ves, even if they favor fewer restrictio­ns on economic developmen­t.

None of this has to spell doom for changing the housing laws. Those residents of progressiv­e places might change their minds if more permissive housing rules become more associated with social justice. In that case, though, progressiv­e cities won’t have to wait for the federal government to make them adopt new policies. If they are willing, they can do it themselves.

Conservati­ves and centrists should do their part: Overregula­tion isn’t unknown in the red and purple regions of the country. But creating new housing opportunit­ies depends most of all on the kind of people who shop at Whole Foods.

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