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The Great Urbanization August 9, 2006

Posted by Brickonomist in Housing need, International.
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The excellent Mark Thoma reproduces two fine Financial Times articles for our delectation. Here are some selected quotes.

Engine of enterprise in push and pull of rural desertion, by Alan Beattie

Today, about 180,000 people around the world will leave the countryside and move to a city. Humans are becoming urban creatures at an accelerating speed. … Cities are the future. Whether they turn out to resemble the gleaming perfection promised by the Emerald City in the Land of Oz or the dystopian chaos of Blade Runner will depend on the technology and governance of future economic development…

The lessons of history are clear: cities do better if they prepare for migrants. And it is easier to deal with people “pulled” towards cities by the prospect of jobs and better lives than those “pushed” by eviction from the countryside.

The British Isles contain three models… As in England, it can be gradual and relatively painless: the “enclosure” by landowners of small tenant farms and publicly held land into bigger enterprises took centuries and monarchs in the 16th and 17th centuries tried to slow the process down to placate protesting villagers. Later, country-dwellers often voluntarily moved to towns when industrialisation created better jobs, in textile mills and the like. As in Scotland, the move can be brutal and abrupt, such as the Lowland and Highland Clearances – the forced removal of tenant farmers to make way for bigger and more productive farms – that began in the 18th century. Glasgow and Edinburgh were inundated with indigent refugees. And as in Ireland, the change can be achieved in a way that in practice if not intent resembled genocide – the famine and land evictions of the mid-19th century that helped to populate Liverpool, Boston and New York.

Thus cities such as Shanghai, to which millions of rural Chinese are desperate to move but are regulated by internal migration controls, do rather better than Mumbai, where refugees fleeing drought and crop failure in the villages of India mean that more than half the city’s population live in shanty towns or slums.

Important though government is, it operates in a landscape shaped by technology and globalisation. Just as the growth of cities was driven by one technological revolution, so others can change or reverse it. Edward Glaeser, a Harvard specialist in the economics of cities, points out that the original reasons for the existence of cities are disappearing. The cost of transporting manufactured goods dropped by 90 per cent in real terms in the 20th century, removing the need for regions to have their own manufacturing and distribution hub.

“The great force that reshaped the city in the 20th century is the engine,” Prof Glaeser says. “People have increasingly been able to propel themselves and their goods over long distances.”

Cheap transport pushed Americans away from Cleveland and Detroit and towards the cheap land and warm weather in sprawling low-density sunbelt cities such as Phoenix, Arizona. Liverpool, the port in north-west England that handled much of Britain’s transatlantic trade, was once the country’s richest city. The decline of its port almost halved its population from 867,000 in 1937 to 442,000 in 2001.

The revolution of information technology and digitisation ought, perhaps, to have completed the job, removing the need for a physical workplace. Yet several of the cities that seemed to be dying in the 1970s – New York, Chicago, Boston and London – have since had remarkable revivals. …

The success of the modern city appears to have two features: one, that digitisation has created a very specialised elite who benefit even more from clustering together and, two, that people are moving to cities not just to work but to play. The industries that are most digitised and computerised – software and financial services – are those that huddle in small, expensive areas … where their top-level staff still need the edge of face-to-face contact with clients and with each other…

Meanwhile, Prof Glaeser notes that the ratio of housing costs to real wages in cities has risen sharply, suggesting that people are choosing to live in cities for reasons other than income. With falling crime rates, the attractions of some cities – bars, restaurants, theatre, not to mention the city as a marriage market – have launched their renaissance as a place of consumption.

How the lure of the city is rapidly swelling the world’s slums, by Fiona Harvey

“A dirtier or more wretched place he had never seen. The street was very narrow and muddy, and the air was impregnated with filthy odours … Covered ways and yards, which here and there diverged from the main street, disclosed little knots of houses, where drunken men and women were positively wallowing in filth.”

The well-heeled residents of 21st-century Clerkenwell would not recognise the description of their chic streets in Charles Dickens’ Oliver Twist. By locating Fagin’s thieves’ kitchen in Saffron Hill, he was choosing one of Victorian London’s most notorious slums; today, even a small flat on the same street can cost more than £500,000 ($954,000, €741,000).

But the sort of urban squalor Londoners associate with the 19th century is growing “at an unprecedented rate”, according to the United Nations. Next year, the UN estimates, more than 1bn people – one out of every three city residents – will live in slums. … In 2007, … the balance of the world’s population will change, perhaps forever. For the first time, more people will live in cities than rural areas…

Overcrowding and poor housing are the most obvious issues for slumdwellers, but these are compounded by poor sanitation and a lack of clean water. There is often little provision for the disposal of solid waste. … Slums also often suffer badly from pollution, because they are built on contaminated land or undesirable areas near large industrial installations…

For these reasons, slumdwellers suffer what Anna Tibaijuka, executive director at UN-Habitat, the human settlements programme, calls the “urban penalty”. She explains: “They have worse health [because of poor sanitation] and they are affected by the worst effects of industrial pollution. If there is a flood or a disaster, it’s the poor who always suffer.”

So far, there seems little prospect of solving these problems in most cities. … The scale of the problem is daunting. More than one-quarter of the developing world’s urban population – more than 560m people – lack access to clean water and sanitation, and about 1.6m people a year die as a direct result. The World Health Organisation estimates that as much as one-quarter of global disease is caused by environmental problems that, if tackled, could save up to 13m lives a year…

Few developing country governments could hope to afford the vast sums needed to clean up their slums. … Annual spending on slums, from both public and private funds, amounts to between 5 and 10 per cent of the sums needed.

What lessons does history teach about tackling the scourges urbanisation brings in its wake? London’s Dickensian misery was alleviated only through a massive programme of public works in the second half of the 19th century. The sewage system built in the wake of the Great Stink of 1858 [from effluent in the Thames] took advantage of existing waterways and serves the city to this day.

Himanshu Parikh, … director of Buro Happold Engineers, … adds that the most successful developments she has seen involve local people, businesses and government working together on slum improvement projects. These have tended to be on a small scale, involving between 800 and 1,200 houses at a time. Projects on a larger scale can become bogged down in bureaucracy and the need to co-ordinate a greater number of interested parties.

The UN-Habitat report on the world’s cities identified strong central government as another essential ingredient in effective slum improvement…

Land reform can be an important weapon in the battle against urban poverty. Slumdwellers suffer from an inherent insecurity because they rarely own title to their land. This leaves them vulnerable to government interference and the whims of developers and reduces their incentive to improve their areas.

None of these issues are easily addressed but, as the UN’s report makes clear, the problems incubating in the world’s slums can no longer be ignored. Moving from Dickensian squalor to the fashionable restaurants and penthouses of today’s Clerkenwell took well over 100 years. Given the speed at which slums are spreading today, urban dwellers must hope the 21st century will yield a more rapid solution than the 19th.

Housing and environmental problems which continue to be a significant driver of inequality in the rich countries seem to pale into insignificance alongside the problems faced by slum dwellers in the places like Nairobi and Mumbai. Which is not to say they’re not important, but that the same arguments for intervention, redistribution and empowerment that hold in the UK must do so at the global level, but perhaps with more urgency and certainly on a far greater scale.

Link-dump: energy efficiency, regeneration, densities, buy-to-let and more August 1, 2006

Posted by Brickonomist in Housebuilding, Housing economics, Housing investment, Housing markets, Housing need, Linkage, London, Planning, Regeneration.
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Apologies for the light posting of late, which was due to more work demands and some very pleasant weekends away. There’s a lot to catch up on so here’s a quick link-dump – I’ll try to come back to one or two of these items in more detail later.

  • The Sustainable Development Commission has published ‘Stock take: delivering improvements in existing housing‘, which details “the technical options available for minimising the energy and water consumed and waste produced by residents of the existing housing stock”. The big question for me is what can be done to improve the efficiency of privately owned homes, with a particular question mark over privately rented housing, which the report rightly identifies as suffering from a ’split incentive’ problem – the tenant doesn’t have the incentive to invest in upgrading the home when she’s not going to be living there long, and the landlord doesn’t have the incentive to do so because she doesn’t pay the bills. Personally I think the landlord should pay some of the bill, but then I would say that because I’m a tenant. See also “Reducing the Carbon Impact of Private Rented Housing
  • England’s Housing Timebomb, from the National Housing Federation, features a prediction from Oxford Economic Forecasting that “the average house price in England will increase by around 50% by 2011, from just under GBP195,000 at the beginning of 2006 to GBP286,000, equivalent to 9.2 times the projected average salary for 2011″. The study concludes that housing associations should therefore be building or refurbishing 80,000 affordable homes each year instead of the current 40,000, which would obviously require much more funding from the state. They might well be right, but this one might get filed under “They would say that, wouldn’t they?”.
  • The Town and Country Planning Association has published a commentary by Julie Cowans with the ungainly title of “Cities and regions of sustainable communities – New strategies”, but the potentially radical message that traditional approaches to addressing poverty (focusing on the “worst” estates first) should be abandoned in favour of proactive policies aimed at creating mixed income communities, i.e. enticing middle-income households into poor areas and trying to capture the resulting increases in land or property values. This has already excited some comment in the housing blogosphere (such as it is): Hannah is sceptical, Kevin pretty enthusiastic. I think Cowans may be drawing on the findings of this work, which I’ve started reading but have yet to finish. Anyway, hope to say more on this in due course.
  • According to CB Richard Ellis, there has been an extraordinary increase in the density of new residential developments in London, no less than a quadrupling (in terms of habitable rooms per hectare) in just four years. They seem to mostly put this down to policy changes, but surely the huge rise in land costs (which obviously isn’t entirely unrelated to policy) is the main driver? Interesting quote: “We found schemes within regeneration and other special policy areas are frequently gaining planning permission for greater density than is recommended in the London Plan”.
  • Labour-run London boroughs are building a lot more affordable housing than their Conservative counterparts, according to Inside Housing: “The 11 Tory authorities in power before the election were due to deliver just 18 per cent of grant funded homes in the capital.” Word on the grapevine is that some incoming Tory administrations have effectively vetoed large numbers of affordable housing developments that were going through the planning stage. Certainly, I don’t expect Hammersmith & Fulham council will be delivering 65% affordable housing in the next few years, as it has in the past.
  • And finally, the Financial Times celebrates ten years of buy-to-let in the UK

Changing the overcrowding standard July 19, 2006

Posted by Brickonomist in Homelessness, Housing need, Local government, Overcrowding.
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The statutory measure of overcrowding in England is a bit of an anomaly. From Tackling Overcrowding in England: A Discussion Paper:

Although the intention of the legislators in 1935 was that the standards should be regularly updated, they have in practice been carried over unchanged into the 1985 Act. They are as a result now well out of line with contemporary expectations. For example a couple with a boy aged 15 years and a girl aged 13 years in a one-bedroom flat would not be statutorily overcrowded because the father and son could share one room and the mother and daughter the sitting room (or even the kitchen).

This hasn’t in itself increased the number of overcrowded households – that’s driven by the availability of accommodation that is both suitable and affordable – but it has reduced the recognition and assistance available to people in overcrowded homes. Changing the standard might give overcrowded households more priority when it comes to accessing social housing, as opposed to homeless households who might be living in housing that’s at least big enough even if it is temporary.

With the publication of this discussion paper it does look as though the government really wants to tackle overcrowding. The main solution will still have to be building more larger affordable homes, but changing the standard should at least go some way towards removing a major distortion in the system for allocating social housing.

Housing and hatred in Barking and Dagenham July 8, 2006

Posted by Brickonomist in Housing need, Local government, London, Planning.
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Here’s another article focusing on the housing crisis as a key factor behind the recent electoral success of the racist British National Party in Barking and Dagenham. It suggests that the ease with which the BNP whipped up resentment over asylum seekers and other ‘outsiders’ apparently jumping the queue (sometimes, it was claimed, with the help of cash grants from neighbouring boroughs) for social housing is a bit of a puzzle, as there are only a handful of asylum seekers accommodated in the council’s housing stock. Charles Fairbrass, Labour leader of the council, suggests people are attributing shifts in the housing market to council policy:

There is a growing black middle class in London and many of them want to get on the property ladder. Because we have some of the cheapest housing in London, they choose to buy here. And when they buy ex-local authority property, people often assume that those properties are still local authority and they’ve been allowed to jump the queue.

I wonder if the movement of homeless households around London has something to do with it too. After all, according to the numbers in Figure 3.6 here, fully one third of the ‘privately rented’ housing in Barking and Dagenham is actually inhabited by homeless households who are being put up in rented accommodation while they wait (often years) for a permanent home. Many if not most of these households will be non-white, and many have probably been placed in Barking & Dagenham by other councils. This could well be perceived by locals as an influx of ethnic minorities into the borough’s social housing stock.

All this benefits nobody except the BNP and the (blameless) private landlords who get to collect extra-high rents (mostly funded through Housing Benefit) from their homeless tenants. The main solution has to be to increase the supply of permanent social housing to provide a decent permanent home to all those who need it.

Valley of the one-bed flats Part 2 July 7, 2006

Posted by Brickonomist in Design, Housebuilding, Housing need, London, Planning.
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I posted a while ago in disappointment at the lack of family housing being planned for the Lower Lea Valley. Now it looks like the same applies to the wider Thames Gateway. That’s according to someone who should know – Eric Sorenson, chief exec of the Thames Gateway Partnership, writing in Building magazine:

What is striking in large parts of London Thames Gateway is the predominance in development of one and two-bed flats. It is as if there has been a significant over-reaction to the increasing number of smaller households …

We know from experience in Europe that higher-density flats can and do work for families. But they have to be reasonably sized, designed to be spacious and flexible, have good sized balconies, require good performance from local management and a well maintained public realm.

What we get too often here are small flats with insufficient commitment to address families’ requirements. Local authorities are becoming increasingly firm about family housing provision in their planning policies but, if there is unbalanced emphasis on housing numbers rather than the nature of the output, we simply won’t create sustainable communities in the Gateway.

I think the same goes for London as a whole, and probably the wider South East. It’s notable that in the proposed update to his London Plan, Ken Livingstone is gung-ho about a big increase in housing numbers and densities, but pretty much devoid of any effective policy to ensure those numbers consist of the family housing London needs, according to his own Housing Requirements Study.

Giving with one hand, taking with two June 19, 2006

Posted by Brickonomist in Housing economics, Housing inequality, Housing investment, Housing need, Party politics.
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24dash is a pretty good site for news on housing and other areas of social policy, and they’ve done well in recruiting Richard Best of the Joseph Rowntree Foundation as a columnist. His latest adds some good detail on a subject I posted about recently, namely the paucity of net government investment in housing:

what people may not appreciate is that a whole series of changes to housing policies have sent billions of pounds to the Treasury. More than enough money to boost the supply of decent, affordable homes …

… over the last 20 years:

* Receipts from the Right-to-Buy sales of Council housing have yielded around £45 billion – but only a quarter has been recycled into improving public housing.
* The abolition of Mortgage Interest Tax Relief (MITR) – which was the corner stone of the Duke of Edinburgh’s Inquiry into British Housing, which celebrated its 20th anniversary last week – has boosted tax receipts by £30 billion, plus a further £3 billion each year.
* Stamp Duty when anyone buys a property (plus a major part of the Inheritance tax) brought in £6.5 billion last year alone.
* The Treasury has not had to put up the money for loans to housing associations through the Housing Corporation because housing associations have been borrowing – more than £50 billion since 1990 – from banks and building societies instead.
* Because of the improved economic climate, with lower levels of unemployment, the government has been paying out less in Housing Benefit to help low-income tenants.

Not convinced about that last one, but housing is clearly generating a lot of revenue for the Treasury – the Right to Buy alone has been easily the most lucrative privatisation of all. Directing a bit more of this money back towards housing seems only fair, and it’s not like there’s nothing to spend it on: Best highlights the need for an extra £2-£3 billion a year for new affordable housing, a safety net for low-income home-owners, help for elderly or vulnerable homeowners to get repairs to their homes, and bringing council homes and estates up to a good condition. He concludes:

The contrast between large financial gains to the Treasury from changes in housing policy and the continued level of misery created by bad housing, is very striking.

If only a modest proportion of the government’s increased revenue was to be recycled, a vital contribution could be made to defusing the growing crisis in British Housing. Come on Gordon Brown, housing needs a better deal!

Are we building enough new homes? June 19, 2006

Posted by Brickonomist in History of housing, Housebuilding, Housing need, London.
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Great to see Channel 4’s excellent FactCheck service back in action, especially as today they took a timely* look at housing minister Yvette Cooper’s claim that “We’ve increased the level of house building very significantly to one of the highest rates for many years now”.

It’s a good analysis too. As they say, the volume of housebuilding in 2005 was indeed the highest (at 159,000 units – see table here) since the early 1990s, but it was nowhere near the estimated annual household increase (209,000) and also way below the level of the 1980s (around 180,000 units a year), let alone the 1970s (around 260,000 units a year). They also talk to the right people, such as Adam Sampson of Shelter, who correctly points out:

When Thatcher came to power, the government had historically built 100,000 council properties a year. In 2003 the government built no more than 13,000 equivalent properties. That alone explains the massive drop in output.

Indeed. In the chart below the blue is homes built by the private sector, the black is housing associations and the grey is local authorities.

housing-supply.png

One point FactCheck might have raised is that looking just at the number of units built doesn’t tell you whether we’re delivering more housing in terms of rooms for people to actually sleep in. Clearly a hundred 4-bed houses is a greater housing supply than a hundred 2-bed flats, so the apparently declining average size of completions (especially in London) should temper Cooper’s enthusiasm somewhat (though to be fair to her, she’s seemed a lot more interested in the consequences of failure to build family homes than her predecessors).

*given the publication tomorrow of the ODPM committee’s report into housing supply and affordability

Quick links 15/06/06 June 15, 2006

Posted by Brickonomist in Design, Environment, Housing markets, Housing need, Overcrowding, Party politics, Planning.
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Sorry for the lack of posting recently – too much work, sun and football on the telly. Here’s a round-up of what’s been happening:

  • Homes to be energy-saving rated: “Every house sold in England and Wales will be given an energy efficiency rating like those found on electrical goods”. Sounds reasonable to me, but will it be introduced for rented housing too? Doesn’t seem to have been confirmed, but these people seem to think it will be.
  • MPs out of touch on housing concerns: “while 98% of the public think that a lack of affordable housing is a major issue, only 34% of MPs think the same.”
  • Redwood all at sea: Let’s build a new city on land reclaimed from the sea, says John. Not sure if this is meant to be more environmentally friendly but it probably wouldn’t be. Maybe Redwood has been inspired by Anthony Lau’s concept of Offshore Living, part of the Sustainable Living By Design exhibition at the GLA, which involves sticking people in refashioned cargo containers stacked on decommissioned oil rigs.
  • Fancy re-designing Castleford?
  • A tight squeeze: “A chronic shortage of family sized homes, planning problems and economic ‘factors’ are contributing to the growing crisis of overcrowding.”
  • Beware the winds of change: “Low income households could lose out in the government’s push towards homeownership, Dominic Maxwell warns”.

Housing conditions and educational attainment May 29, 2006

Posted by Brickonomist in America, Housing need, Overcrowding.
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In “A Room With a View or a Room of One’s Own? Housing and Social Stratification“, Dalton Conley (an ‘academic superstar’, according to the Guardian) reports some interesting findings on the relationship between family background, household conditions and educational attainment.

Echoing similar research carried out in France, he finds that “children who lived in crowded conditions … completed almost a quarter year less schooling than those who lived in more spacious conditions”, that home ownership also boosts attainment independently of family background and concludes that “housing plays an intermediary role in the transmission of socioeconomic status from one generation to the next”.

The issue of overcrowding raises interesting questions about ‘absolute’ versus ‘relative’ effects similar to controversies over absolute versus relative poverty. It’s easy to see why crowded accommodation might have direct impacts upon children’s attainment independent of conditions outside the home – Conley cites evidence for higher morbidity, less privacy and less ‘consructive interaction’ between parents and children in crowded homes. But are there relative effects too? Parents and teachers of overcrowded children often describe them as reluctant to bring friends round because of shame over conditions at home, and if they do attach a stigma to their home life they may be more reluctant to spend time there, perhaps increasing their exposure to negative influences outside the home. This is all hard to measure, of course, and if I had to say I’d guess the ‘absolute’ effect dominates, but the fact that we are still picking up clear effects caused by overcrowding measured as over 1 persons per room, even thoguh that was probably considered relatively salubrious in early 20th century London, suggests that relative effects are also important.

Two other findings of Conley’s are interesting, but perhaps more so in the American context of black-white housing segregation. Firstly,

even when a 5-year income measure, education and other demographic characteristics are held constant, blacks and female heads [i.e. lone mothers] suffer from worse housing outcomes

but

when socioeconomic and housing conditions are held constant, Africa-Americans actually demonstrate an educational advantage over their non-black counterparts of almost four-tenths of a grade.

The message is clear – if you want to close the education gap between black and white, you have to close not just the gap in incomes but the one in housing conditions too.

500% Dynamite May 23, 2006

Posted by Brickonomist in Environment, Housing economics, Housing need.
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George Monbiot comes out swinging this morning: “Second-home owners are perhaps the most selfish people in the United Kingdom”. He rightly wonders why they should pay only 90% of the standard council tax, and suggests 500% instead. That all?

Okay, 500% is way over the top (and would inspire all sorts of wasteful avoidance tactics), but I would tend to agree that a discount for second homes doesn’t make much sense. I’m pretty sceptical that second home owners should really be getting all the blame for homelessness in rural areas, though – there’s the simple failure to build enough new social housing too. But at least George’s plan would have the welcome side-effect of making Simon Jenkins’s head explode.