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Economics of and Alternatives to

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What is the minimum project size before the regulation kicks in? ... Reform building codes (knocker vs. door bell) Relax design standards (no garage, small yard) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Economics of and Alternatives to


1
Economics of and Alternatives to Inclusionary
Zoning
Presented by Elliot F. Eisenberg, Ph.D. National
Association of Home Builders October 18,
2006 Miami, FL
2
Overview
  • Microeconomics of IZ
  • Alternative strategies
  • Very brief review

3

Part One Microeconomics of IZ
4
This is Inclusionary Zoning!
  • What is the minimum project size before the
    regulation kicks in?
  • What is the income limit for affordable units (
    of AMI)?
  • Is off-site development and/or cash-in-lieu
    permitted?
  • What percent of units are to be affordable?
  • Are density bonuses allowed? If yes, are they
    portable?
  • Are there minimum affordable unit/lot size
    requirements?
  • What is the level of retained equity in an IZ
    program?
  • What is the slope of demand curve?
  • What is the slope of supply curve?
  • What kind of behavioral changes will there be in
    neighboring cities?
  • Are impact fees waived?
  • Are property taxes abated for a period of years?
  • Are design and code standards relaxed for
    affordable units?
  • Is there a lot of bureaucracy involved?
  • Are single-family units to be treated differently
    than multi-family units?
  • What happens when construction slows down?

5
Microeconomics of IZ
  • A Caveat
  • NOTE There is wide agreement among economists
    regarding the impact of IZ.
  • A Fact
  • IZ typically raises the cost of home production.

6
Microeconomics of IZ
  • Basic Assumptions
  • Local housing market is in equilibrium
  • IZ is imposed on a small geographic area
  • IZ ordinance is ordinary
  • Unrestricted firm entry and exit
  • Home construction is possible elsewhere

7
Microeconomics of IZ
Supply w/IZ
P r i c e o f H o u s i n g

Supply
Pt
Reg.
P0
Demand
Q0
Qt
Quantity of Housing
8
Microeconomics of IZ
  • Inclusionary zoning is likely to
  • A) Increase new house prices
  • B) Decrease new housing supply
  • C) Increase existing house prices
  • D) Decrease land prices
  • E) Push building outside IZ zone

9
Who Bears the Burden of IZ?
  • The only seven candidates are
  • Suppliers, Workers, Builders, Developers,
    Landowners, Buyers and Renters
  • Politicians/activists like to think builders pay.
  • But, do they?
  • In reality who pays depends on who is more
    mobile.
  • Think about the elasticity of supply and demand.

10
Who Bears the Burden of IZ?
  • If buyers have better alternatives
  • landowners bear more burden
  • If landowners have better alternatives
  • buyers bear more
  • In each case there is less market rate
    construction in the jurisdiction with IZ

11
Who Bears the Burden of IZ?
12
Part Two Alternative Strategies
13
Alternative Strategies(Supply Side)
  • Expedite development reviews
  • Negotiated vs. mandatory ordinances
  • Increase density bonuses (for use elsewhere)
  • Reform building codes (knocker vs. door bell)
  • Relax design standards (no garage, small yard)
  • Eliminate exclusionary zoning (smaller lot)
  • Entitle a sufficient number of lots
  • But best of all, USE MARKET FORCES!

14
Alternative Strategies(Demand Side)
  • Create a down payment assistance program
  • Create a rental assistance program
  • Create a low rate mortgage program
  • Propose passage of a living wage
  • Create a savings assistance plan
  • Provide coaching and ongoing support

15
Alternative Strategies(General)
  • Set realistic target incomes
  • (100 of Area Median Income)
  • Create funding mechanisms with a broad base.
  • Create funding streams that are steady.
  • Insure that in lieu fees are spent on housing
  • Treat it like economic development!
  • Point out that inclusionary zoning is a bad idea
  • with sale controls no equity is built up (bad)
  • absent sale controls affordability is instantly
    lost (bad)

16

Part Three Very Brief Review
17
Review
  • There is no free lunch!
  • IZ pushes costs up and to the left
  • IZ raises price of all new most existing homes
  • IZ exacerbates affordability problems
  • Builders are not the ones that pay
  • Those that dont get a unit are made worse off
  • Units are distributed unfairly
  • JUST move supply curve DOWN TO THE RIGHT!

18
  • CONTACT ME!
  • Elliot F. Eisenberg, Ph.D.
  • National Association of Home Builders
  • 1201 15th Street NW
  • Washington, DC 20005
  • eeisenberg_at_nahb.com
  • Phone 202-266-8398
  • Fax 202-266-8426
  • THANK YOU VERY MUCH!
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