This paper summarises the evidence from recent research relating to the British Planning system's impact on the supply of development. Planning serves important economic and social purposes but it is essential to distinguish between restricting development relative to demand in particular places to provide public goods and mitigate market failure in other ways, including ensuring the future ability of cities to expand and maintain a supply of public goods and infrastructure; and an absolute restriction on supply, raising prices of housing and other urban development generally. Evidence is presented that there are at least four separate mechanisms, inbuilt into the British system, which result in a systematic undersupply of land and space fo...
A group of leading businessmen have written to the Times supporting government reforms to the planni...
This paper provides a critical perspective on England’s housing crisis, characterised here as a conc...
A day later than planned, here's my write up of the second part of my LSE public lecture (you can re...
This paper summarises the evidence from recent research relating to the British Planning system's im...
Planning is about other things as well, but it is fundamentally an economic activity. It allocates a...
We investigate the impact of land use regulation on housing vacancy rates. Using a 30-year panel dat...
There is a popular view that land use planning regulations (‘planning’) is hostile to both developme...
Summary. There is evidence that the implementation of the planning system creates `scarcity rents &a...
This paper reviews the role of market failures in land markets, evidence as to their quantitative si...
For 30 years planning has been attacked both rhetorically and materially in England as governments h...
Although housing crises are rooted in both demand-side pressures and supply-side blockages, perceive...
This book brings together a range of viewpoints on a number of the burning issues affecting urban su...
This paper focuses on the contentious transition to viability-driven planning in England, whereby de...
Earlier this week the BBC reported on findings from a Halifax poll suggesting that first time buyers...
Policy makers agree that vacant houses are undesirable. Moreover the existence of empty houses is us...
A group of leading businessmen have written to the Times supporting government reforms to the planni...
This paper provides a critical perspective on England’s housing crisis, characterised here as a conc...
A day later than planned, here's my write up of the second part of my LSE public lecture (you can re...
This paper summarises the evidence from recent research relating to the British Planning system's im...
Planning is about other things as well, but it is fundamentally an economic activity. It allocates a...
We investigate the impact of land use regulation on housing vacancy rates. Using a 30-year panel dat...
There is a popular view that land use planning regulations (‘planning’) is hostile to both developme...
Summary. There is evidence that the implementation of the planning system creates `scarcity rents &a...
This paper reviews the role of market failures in land markets, evidence as to their quantitative si...
For 30 years planning has been attacked both rhetorically and materially in England as governments h...
Although housing crises are rooted in both demand-side pressures and supply-side blockages, perceive...
This book brings together a range of viewpoints on a number of the burning issues affecting urban su...
This paper focuses on the contentious transition to viability-driven planning in England, whereby de...
Earlier this week the BBC reported on findings from a Halifax poll suggesting that first time buyers...
Policy makers agree that vacant houses are undesirable. Moreover the existence of empty houses is us...
A group of leading businessmen have written to the Times supporting government reforms to the planni...
This paper provides a critical perspective on England’s housing crisis, characterised here as a conc...
A day later than planned, here's my write up of the second part of my LSE public lecture (you can re...