Living and Leaving
The availability and affordability of decent housing has become an important economic and social concern in the European Union (EU), as housing price increases in metropolitan regions have often outpaced wage increases. Housing is at the heart of growing economic divides in Europe. This is because productivity growth, which comes with higher wages and better jobs, is concentrated in cities and industrial clusters. Housing is unaffordable in metropolitan centers because the construction of new homes has not kept up with demand, reducing the standard of living of low-income households, and dissuading workers from moving to the most productive regions. While policy incentives have favored homeowners since the 1970s, less attention and resources have been devoted to easing the potential barriers and market restrictions that would allow housing supply to respond to increases in demand. Across EU member states, policymakers should focus on ensuring that land use, rental and other regulations are consistent with incentives to spur residential construction. The report highlights three key recommendations for EU policymakers: earmark unused public land for housing development and speed up approval processes; invest in greenfield projects with improved transportation links from suburban areas, to ensure cities cast a wider economic net; and create public registries to improve transparency of house sale prices to help greater competition between areas.
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Format: | Report biblioteca |
Language: | English |
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World Bank, Washington, DC
2018-11-01
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Subjects: | HOUSING, AFFORDABILITY, TAX POLICY, WELFARE IMPACT, MOBILITY, LABOR PRODUCTIVITY, WAGES, REGULATION, |
Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/947981541623732950/Living-and-Leaving-Housing-Mobility-and-Welfare-in-the-European-Union https://hdl.handle.net/10986/30898 |
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dig-okr-10986308982024-08-07T19:15:24Z Living and Leaving Housing, Mobility and Welfare in the European Union Karver, Jonathan Inchauste, Gabriela Kim, Yeon Soo Abdel Jelil, Mohamed HOUSING AFFORDABILITY TAX POLICY WELFARE IMPACT MOBILITY LABOR PRODUCTIVITY WAGES REGULATION The availability and affordability of decent housing has become an important economic and social concern in the European Union (EU), as housing price increases in metropolitan regions have often outpaced wage increases. Housing is at the heart of growing economic divides in Europe. This is because productivity growth, which comes with higher wages and better jobs, is concentrated in cities and industrial clusters. Housing is unaffordable in metropolitan centers because the construction of new homes has not kept up with demand, reducing the standard of living of low-income households, and dissuading workers from moving to the most productive regions. While policy incentives have favored homeowners since the 1970s, less attention and resources have been devoted to easing the potential barriers and market restrictions that would allow housing supply to respond to increases in demand. Across EU member states, policymakers should focus on ensuring that land use, rental and other regulations are consistent with incentives to spur residential construction. The report highlights three key recommendations for EU policymakers: earmark unused public land for housing development and speed up approval processes; invest in greenfield projects with improved transportation links from suburban areas, to ensure cities cast a wider economic net; and create public registries to improve transparency of house sale prices to help greater competition between areas. 2018-11-27T22:31:17Z 2018-11-27T22:31:17Z 2018-11-01 Report Rapport Informe http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/947981541623732950/Living-and-Leaving-Housing-Mobility-and-Welfare-in-the-European-Union https://hdl.handle.net/10986/30898 English CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank application/pdf text/plain World Bank, Washington, DC |
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Estados Unidos |
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Bibliográfico |
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biblioteca |
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America del Norte |
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Biblioteca del Banco Mundial |
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English |
topic |
HOUSING AFFORDABILITY TAX POLICY WELFARE IMPACT MOBILITY LABOR PRODUCTIVITY WAGES REGULATION HOUSING AFFORDABILITY TAX POLICY WELFARE IMPACT MOBILITY LABOR PRODUCTIVITY WAGES REGULATION |
spellingShingle |
HOUSING AFFORDABILITY TAX POLICY WELFARE IMPACT MOBILITY LABOR PRODUCTIVITY WAGES REGULATION HOUSING AFFORDABILITY TAX POLICY WELFARE IMPACT MOBILITY LABOR PRODUCTIVITY WAGES REGULATION Karver, Jonathan Inchauste, Gabriela Kim, Yeon Soo Abdel Jelil, Mohamed Living and Leaving |
description |
The availability and affordability of
decent housing has become an important economic and social
concern in the European Union (EU), as housing price
increases in metropolitan regions have often outpaced wage
increases. Housing is at the heart of growing economic
divides in Europe. This is because productivity growth,
which comes with higher wages and better jobs, is
concentrated in cities and industrial clusters. Housing is
unaffordable in metropolitan centers because the
construction of new homes has not kept up with demand,
reducing the standard of living of low-income households,
and dissuading workers from moving to the most productive
regions. While policy incentives have favored homeowners
since the 1970s, less attention and resources have been
devoted to easing the potential barriers and market
restrictions that would allow housing supply to respond to
increases in demand. Across EU member states, policymakers
should focus on ensuring that land use, rental and other
regulations are consistent with incentives to spur
residential construction. The report highlights three key
recommendations for EU policymakers: earmark unused public
land for housing development and speed up approval
processes; invest in greenfield projects with improved
transportation links from suburban areas, to ensure cities
cast a wider economic net; and create public registries to
improve transparency of house sale prices to help greater
competition between areas. |
format |
Report |
topic_facet |
HOUSING AFFORDABILITY TAX POLICY WELFARE IMPACT MOBILITY LABOR PRODUCTIVITY WAGES REGULATION |
author |
Karver, Jonathan Inchauste, Gabriela Kim, Yeon Soo Abdel Jelil, Mohamed |
author_facet |
Karver, Jonathan Inchauste, Gabriela Kim, Yeon Soo Abdel Jelil, Mohamed |
author_sort |
Karver, Jonathan |
title |
Living and Leaving |
title_short |
Living and Leaving |
title_full |
Living and Leaving |
title_fullStr |
Living and Leaving |
title_full_unstemmed |
Living and Leaving |
title_sort |
living and leaving |
publisher |
World Bank, Washington, DC |
publishDate |
2018-11-01 |
url |
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/947981541623732950/Living-and-Leaving-Housing-Mobility-and-Welfare-in-the-European-Union https://hdl.handle.net/10986/30898 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT karverjonathan livingandleaving AT inchaustegabriela livingandleaving AT kimyeonsoo livingandleaving AT abdeljelilmohamed livingandleaving AT karverjonathan housingmobilityandwelfareintheeuropeanunion AT inchaustegabriela housingmobilityandwelfareintheeuropeanunion AT kimyeonsoo housingmobilityandwelfareintheeuropeanunion AT abdeljelilmohamed housingmobilityandwelfareintheeuropeanunion |
_version_ |
1807158813928718336 |