Zoning and the Cost of Housing: Evidence from Silicon Valley, Greater New Haven, and Greater Austin

Robert C. Ellickson
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

Municipal zoning, shockingly, may be the most consequential regulatory program in the United States. The Article develops metrics for measuring the extent to which a locality’s zoning practices are exclusionary, that is, limit the possible construction of least-cost housing. It applies the metrics to actual zoning ordinances and zoning maps, materials that legal scholars have seldom closely appraised. The municipalities chosen for study lie in three metropolitan areas, the ones listed in the Article’s title. Of the three, zoning in Greater Austin, one of the fastest growing metropolitan areas in the United States, is — to no one’s surprise — the most conducive to housing development. Austin suburbs have less large-lot zoning, more small-lot zoning, and fewer restrictions on the construction of multifamily housing. House prices in Silicon Valley, now commonly ten times the national median, were only slightly above the median in 1970. The extreme escalation of Silicon Valley housing prices has stemmed in significant part from its suburbs’ multifaceted efforts, after 1970, to limit further densification. Some towns in Greater New Haven, by contrast, adopted exclusionary policies as early as the 1930s. These towns’ enactments have distorted the region’s urban form and reduced its agglomeration efficiencies, but had little effect on housing prices. The Article surveys the zoning histories of the three regions, introducing, in due course, issues such as water supply, the structure of local government law, and racial demography. The final parts of the Article are more overtly normative. They present the case for boosting permitted residential densities in urban areas of the United States. To counter neighborhood NIMBYism, state legislatures should either preempt local discretion over what can be built, or reward localities that allow denser housing.
分区和住房成本:来自硅谷、大纽黑文和大奥斯汀的证据
令人震惊的是,市政分区可能是美国最重要的监管项目。文章开发了衡量一个地方的分区实践的排他性程度的指标,即限制最低成本住房的可能建设。它将度量标准应用于实际的分区条例和分区地图,法律学者很少仔细评估这些材料。被选为研究对象的城市位于文章标题中列出的三个大都市区。在这三个地区中,大奥斯汀地区是美国发展最快的大都市区之一,毫无疑问,它是最有利于住房开发的。奥斯汀郊区的大地块分区较少,小地块分区较多,对多户住宅建设的限制也较少。硅谷的房价现在通常是全国中位数的十倍,而在1970年仅略高于中位数。硅谷房价的极端上涨,在很大程度上源于其郊区在1970年之后采取的多方面措施,以限制人口进一步密集化。相比之下,大纽黑文的一些城镇早在20世纪30年代就采取了排他政策。这些城镇的立法扭曲了该地区的城市形态,降低了其集聚效率,但对房价影响甚微。本文考察了这三个地区的分区历史,适时地介绍了诸如供水、地方政府法律结构和种族人口等问题。该条的最后部分更加明显地具有规范性。他们提出了在美国城市地区提高允许居住密度的案例。为了对抗邻避主义,州立法机构应该优先考虑地方的自由裁量权,或者奖励允许密集住房的地方。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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