Many households spend more than they can afford on housing and transportation, but the latest International Housing Affordability Survey is wrong to recommend sprawl as the best solution. Real solutions must reduce both housing and transport costs.
Many hard-working families spend more than they can afford on housing and transportation, leaving them with insufficient money to spend on other essential goods such as food and healthcare. This is a tragedy. It results, in part, from public policies that favor expensive housing and transportation options over more affordable alternatives.
There are many possible ways to reduce housing costs but some are much better than others overall. A cheap house is not truly affordable if located in a sprawled, automobile-dependent area with high transportation costs, and households can rationally spend more than is generally considered affordable for a house located in a walkable urban neighborhood where they don't need a car. True affordability therefore requires policies that increase affordable-accessible housing [pdf]. Many cities have a shortage of such housing, forcing low- and moderate-income households to spend more than they can afford.
The 2017 International Housing Affordability Survey [pdf] (IHAS), released last month, finds that housing costs are excessive in many cities. I agree with the authors, Wendell Cox and Hugh Pavletich, that this is a serious problem. However, their analysis is incomplete and biased, and the solutions they recommend, which consist primarily of more sprawl, would further harm many lower-income households, as discussed in my previous blogs, "How Not to Measure Housing Affordability," "What is a ‘House’? Critiquing the Demographia International Housing Affordability Survey," "More Critique of Demographia’s International Housing Affordability Survey," and "Smart Growth Policies for Urban Affordability and Fertility." Much better solutions exist.
Affordability refers to households ability to purchase basic goods such as food, clothing, shelter, transportation and healthcare. In the past, affordability was often defined as households spending less than 30% of their budgets on housing, including rents or mortgages, property taxes and insurance, basic utilities and maintenance, but since households often make trade-offs between housing and transportation costs, many experts now recommend evaluating affordability based on lower-income households’ ability to spend less than 45% of their budgets on housing and transport combined.
The following two graphs illustrate the problem. The first shows the portion of household budgets devoted to various goods. Excepting the highest quintile, all income categories spend more than 45% (indicated by the orange line) on housing and transportation.
Portion of Household Spending By Income Quintile [pdf]
Of course, these cost burdens vary depending on household circumstances. Since approximately a third of lower-income households own their homes and a quarter own no vehicles, these average statistics understate the cost burdens on those that pay rents or mortgages, and own cars. The second figure shows spending by lower-income households (average of first and second income quintiles), assuming that home-owning households spend 70% less on housing, and car-fee households spend 70% less on transportation, than overall averages, and with adjustments to other spending categories based on their budget shares. This indicates that lower-income households that pay rents or mortgages and own a motor vehicle devote approximately 60% of their budgets to housing and transport, approximately 30% more than is considered affordable.
Lower-Income Households' Spending By Home and Car Ownership [pdf]
The IHAS cites the following Wall Street Journal article figure as evidence that housing unaffordability is caused by constraints on urban expansion, but this misrepresents the issue. All the cities it categorizes as expensive are attractive, economically successful, and geographically constrained coastal cities, while all those that expanded their residential areas are unconstrained inland urban regions. It makes no sense to suggest that constrained cities such as Los Angeles, New York, San Jose, and Seattle can become affordable by expanding like unconstrained cities such as Atlanta, Austin, Los Vegas, and Raleigh. Geographically constrained cities must grow up, not out.
The IHAS's overall ranking shows the same myopia. Consider the cities it ranks as most and least affordable:
Most Affordable |
Least Affordable |
Racine, WI Bay City, MI Decatur, IL and Elmira, NY East Stroudsburg, PA Karratha (Australia) Lima, OH Moncton, NB (Canada) Peoria, IL Rockford, IL Scranton-Wilkes Barre, PA Springfield, OH Terre Haute, IN Youngstown, OH-PA |
Hong Kong (China) Sydney, NSW (Australia) Vancouver, BC (Canada) Santa Cruz, CA (USA) Santa Barbara, CA (USA) Auckland (New Zealand) Wingcaribbee, NSW (Australia) Tweed Heads, NSW (Australia) San Jose, CA (USA) Melbourne, VIC (Australia) |
The most affordable are all smaller, slower-growing inland cities. I’m sure they are nice places to live, but are inappropriate models for increasing affordability in large, attractive, economically successful, rapidly growing coastal cities, such as Hong Kong, Sydney, and Vancouver. The key to affordability in geographically constrained cities is to allow more affordable infill housing by reducing restrictions on compact housing types (townhouses and multi-family housing), and eliminating minimum parking requirements.
The IHAS ignores the much higher transportation costs of sprawled cities. These costs are illustrated by recent analysis, summarized in the table below. It compares the United States' 25 largest compact cities and 25 largest sprawled cities. Compact city households devote an affordable 40.4% of their budget to housing and transportation, compared with sprawled cities' unaffordable 49.9%. This can be explained by the sprawled cites much lower Walkscore ratings and higher automobile commute mode shares, which require most adults to own a personal automobile. Compact city residents have more affordable transport options, offering thousands of dollars in annual transport cost savings. Of course, not every household takes advantage of these potential savings. Many spend more on automobiles than is essential, for convenience or status sake, but having the ability to reduce vehicle ownership and associated costs if needed (for example, if a household's incomes declines or has a new financial burden), can significantly increase affordability.
Compact Versus Sprawled City Performance (Robert Steuteville)
|
Traditional Compact Cities |
Newer Sprawled Cities |
Predominant location |
Northeast and Great Lakes |
Sunbelt |
Average area |
85 square miles |
300 square miles |
Average population density |
10,480/sq. mile (16/acre) |
2,750/sq. mile (4/acre) |
Street network |
Urban grid, good connectivity |
Suburban, poor connectivity |
Average Walkscore |
78 |
40 |
Automobile commute share |
55% |
94% |
Single-family detached housing |
22% |
56% |
Median household income |
$54,877 |
$54,467 |
Portion of median income devoted to housing and transport |
40.4% |
49.9% |
2000 to 2010 growth rates |
3.8% |
8.2% |
The IHAS argues, without evidence, that high housing prices are caused by urban containment boundaries that limit urban expansion, but researchers who examine this claim conclude otherwise. A detailed study by Professor Michael Lewyn and Kristoffer Jackson, "How Often Do Cities Mandate Smart Growth or Green Building?" found that, in fact, few U.S. jurisdictions have effective urban containment boundaries but virtually all restrict affordable infill by requiring large size parcels, forbidding multi-family housing in residential neighborhoods, and imposing generous minimum parking requirements which reduce housing affordability and density. Most other countries have fewer restrictions on urban infill, greater affordability and higher home ownership rates, as described in Sonia Hirt's book, Zoned in the USA.
The IHAS argues that sprawled urban regions are more livable due to increased affordability and reduced traffic congestion. This is not entirely true. Sprawled community's lower single-family housing cost are often offset by higher transportation costs, resulting in lower overall affordability, and although more compact cities tend to have more intense traffic congestion (percentage peak-period traffic speed reductions), but this is more than offset by shorter average trip lengths and lower automobile mode shares, so residents tend to have lower per capita congestion costs [pdf] (annual delay hours). Empirical research indicates that compact development tends to reduce congestion costs overall. For example, a major Phoenix, Arizona study [pdf] found that residents of older neighborhoods with more compact and mixed development, more connected streets, better walking conditions, and better public transit services experienced less congestion and spent less total time traveling than did residents of newer, lower-density, automobile-dependent suburbs. Urban residents’ commute trips averaged about seven miles and shopping trips three miles, compared with almost eleven and 4 miles, respectively, in suburban areas.
The IHAS ignores other costs of sprawl including higher infrastructure costs, higher traffic fatality rates, higher rates of obesity and associated health problems, reduced mobility options for non-drivers, and associated increases in drivers' chauffeuring costs [pdf]. The IHAS argues that sprawl increases household economic opportunity and wealth; it couldn’t be more wrong. Sprawl reduces overall accessibility, which reduces employment opportunities, particularly for economically disadvantaged people. A recent study described in "Does Urban Sprawl Hold Down Upward Mobility?" found that upward mobility (the chance that a child born in a lower-income household becomes more economically successful as an adult) is significantly higher in compact areas than sprawling areas. Their analysis indicates that this results from better job access and less income segregation in more compact areas.
The IHAS cites a study by Chang-Tai Hsieh and Enrico Moretti, "Why Do Cities Matter? Local Growth and Aggregate Growth," as evidence that housing regulatory constraints in economically successful urban regions such as San Francisco and New York reduce national employment and productivity growth; they imply that this refers to urban containment regulations but the study actually emphasizes agglomeration efficiencies and so criticizes restrictions on urban infill. In fact, they point out that the type of population growth that the IHAS advocates, based on low housing costs rather than productivity growth, can be economically harmful. They explain: "Essentially, Phoenix, Las Vegas and Riverside have attracted many residents because of good weather and abundant supply of cheap housing but this reallocation results in a loss in aggregate output because it has brought more people working in cities where the marginal product of labor is low."
Instead, they advocate unrestrained urban infill in economically successful regions. Citing San Jose, California, Hsieh and Moretti explain, "In a region with some of the most expensive real estate in the world, surface parking lots, 1-story buildings and underutilized pieces of land are still remarkably common due to land use restrictions." They therefore recommend national policies to reduce such restrictions, plus major investments in commuter rail to improve labor access in economically dynamic urban regions, exactly the opposite of what Cox and Pavletich suggest.
More compact development can also help households generate more long-term wealth [pdf] by allowing them to shift spending from vehicles, which rapidly depreciates, to housing, which tends to appreciate in value. Choosing a home in walkable urban neighborhood rather than an automobile-dependent, urban-fringe location can typically provide a household with about $6,000 in annual transportation cost savings, which can finance about $100,000 in additional housing investment. A household can build an additional $65,000 in equity (wealth) in a decade by choosing a more expensive urban home that requires less spending on transportation instead of a cheaper house at the urban fringe with higher transportation costs.
This is not to suggest that cities should never expand, but to be resource efficient and maximize overall accessibility the expansion must be compact and multi-modal, with good walking, cycling and public transit in order to maintain transportation affordability. Despite its focus on sprawl-oriented solutions, the IHAS actually acknowledges that other solutions can be effective at reducing excessive housing costs. In the Introduction, Oliver Hartwich describes Germany and Switzerland as the best examples of affluent countries that minimize housing price inflation. He explains, "In Germany and Switzerland, council budgets largely depend on their ability to attract new residents and taxpayers. This is why both countries are have traditionally had a more responsive and flexible housing supply side."
What he doesn't mention is that both countries have strict urban containment regulations and policies that encourage compact housing, with only about 45% of households living in single-family homes. If urban containment really was the threat that Cox and Pavletich claim these countries should be among the least affordable.
Similarly, the IHAS cites Singapore's success in increasing housing affordability, which results from government programs to build subsidized high-rise apartment buildings, plus regulations that limit foreign housing purchases. This recognizes that geographically constrained cities must grow up, not out, and rely on government interventions to maintain affordability.
As I've previously pointed out, the IHAS lacks detailed information on its data sources and analysis methods. From what I can determine much of its housing price only considers single-family housing purchase prices, which exaggerates unaffordabiliy in cities where a major portion consists of multi-family or rental housing. Despite numerous efforts to contact Cox and Pavletich, they have never responded to questions or criticisms. These flaws indicate that the IHAS is propaganda rather than serious academic research.
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