失败的经济适用房联邦制:为什么各州不使用住房券

IF 2.1 2区 社会学 Q1 LAW
Noah M Kazis
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引用次数: 0

摘要

这篇文章揭示了我们提供经济适用房的制度中一个严重的脱节。在联邦政府层面,低收入住房政策中最古老、最激烈的争论是基于项目的补贴和基于租户的补贴:政府应该帮助建造新的经济适用房项目,还是帮助租房者在私人市场上买得起房子?但在州和地方层面,这场辩论似乎从未发生过。联邦政府(跟随大多数专家)采用这两种策略,采用基于租户的援助,使其更具成本效益,并为租户提供更多的选择和流动性。但这篇文章表明,州和地方住房券计划是罕见的,小,仅限于特殊人群。各州和各城市几乎只提供基于项目的租金援助。尽管市场条件和政治要求各不相同,但他们步调一致:基于项目的支出在高租金市场和低租金市场以及自由和保守州都占绝对主导地位。几十年来,各州一直在增加支出。这种统一的次国家方式表明了一种不健康的联邦制——既没有效率,也没有实验性。本文进一步分析了各州做出这种不寻常选择的原因,找出了四个主要原因:(1)财政拮据的州使用基于项目的模型来最大限度地减少经济衰退期间痛苦的削减;(2)不完整的联邦住房补贴无意中刺激了基于项目的支出;(3)参与保障性住房融资和建设的利益集团在地方层面相对强势;(4)租赁援助不寻常的、类似彩票的性质提升了有形支出的价值,而不是成本效益。最后,本文指出了改革的方向,提出了两条前进道路。从联邦主义者的角度来看,可以对联邦住房法规有一个新的理解。更好的合作模式——扩大联邦或州政府在提供可负担住房方面的作用——可以接受各州在提供租赁援助方面的局限性,并利用它们的优势。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Failed Federalism of Affordable Housing: Why States Don't Use Housing Vouchers
This Article uncovers a critical disjuncture in our system of providing affordable rental housing. At the federal level, the oldest, fiercest debate in low-income housing policy is between project-based and tenant-based subsidies: should the government help build new affordable housing projects or help renters afford homes on the private market? But at the state and local levels, it is as if this debate never took place. The federal government (following most experts) employs both strategies, embracing tenant-based assistance as more cost-effective and offering tenants greater choice and mobility. But this Article shows that state and local housing voucher programs are rare, small, and limited to special populations. States and cities almost exclusively provide project-based rental assistance. They move in lockstep despite disparate market conditions and political demands: project-based spending overwhelmingly predominates in both high- and lowrent markets and in both liberal and conservative states. States have done so across decades of increased spending. This uniform subnational approach suggests an unhealthy federalism—neither efficient nor experimental. This Article further diagnoses why states have made this unusual choice, identifying four primary culprits: (1) fiscally-constrained states use project-based models to minimize painful cuts during recessions; (2) incomplete federal housing subsidies inadvertently incentivize project-based spending; (3) the interest groups involved in financing and constructing affordable housing are relatively more powerful subnationally; and (4) rental assistance’s unusual, lottery-like nature elevates the value of visible spending over cost-effectiveness. Finally, this Article points the way toward reform, offering two paths forward. Taking a federalist perspective allows for a new understanding of federal housing statutes. Better cooperative models—expanding either the federal or state role in providing affordable housing—could accept states’ limitations in providing rental assistance and exploit their strengths.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.80
自引率
3.70%
发文量
38
期刊介绍: The Michigan Law Review is a journal of legal scholarship. Eight issues are published annually. Seven of each volume"s eight issues ordinarily are composed of two major parts: Articles by legal scholars and practitioners, and Notes written by the student editors. One issue in each volume is devoted to book reviews. Occasionally, special issues are devoted to symposia or colloquia. First Impressions, the online companion to the Michigan Law Review, publishes op-ed length articles by academics, judges, and practitioners on current legal issues. This extension of the printed journal facilitates quick dissemination of the legal community’s initial impressions of important judicial decisions, legislative developments, and timely legal policy issues.
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