The 2011 Affordable Homes Programme (AHP) introduced dramatic reductions in the level of government grant for new-build construction by Housing Associations, with an expectation that Associations’ rents would rise towards market rates to compensate. Through this paper, I explore London-based Associations’ use of cross-subsidy from commercial sale and rental operations to ameliorate the push towards higher rents for social housing. I characterise the spatially-variegated response to the as AHP ‘asymmetric marketisation’. The case illustrates the value of bridging between Economic Geography literatures that acknowledge spatial variation in state-market constellations but offers less developed insights on modes of marketisation, and Political ...
Much of mainstream economic analysis assumes that markets adjust smoothly, through prices, to change...
The government wants 3m houses built by 2020. Economic theory tells us their locations matter for li...
This chapter presents the concept of a ‘housing market arena’, which offers an alternative to the co...
The research explores the regional responses to a changing context in housing associations and marke...
In a rapidly changing policy context, housing associations are facing significant decisions about st...
Over recent decades the UK has seen an increasing shift in housing tenure away from privately or soc...
The global rhetoric surrounding the role of private markets in the provision of new housing masks a ...
Regulatory governance involves the use of heterogeneous mechanisms to extract welfare gains from mar...
This paper explores the emergence of housing strategies at the regional level in England in the cont...
This paper develops a tiered geography of local housing market areas (HMAs) that provides a national...
Set against a background of enduring austerity and an accelerating housing crisis, local authorities...
This paper argues that narratives of the Big Society and Localism in England enacted through housing...
Originally seen as the ‘third arm’ of UK housing policy, the independent, not-for-profit housing ass...
This paper considers the impact of existing land use patterns on housing supply price elasticities i...
The global rhetoric surrounding the role of private markets in the provision of new housing masks a ...
Much of mainstream economic analysis assumes that markets adjust smoothly, through prices, to change...
The government wants 3m houses built by 2020. Economic theory tells us their locations matter for li...
This chapter presents the concept of a ‘housing market arena’, which offers an alternative to the co...
The research explores the regional responses to a changing context in housing associations and marke...
In a rapidly changing policy context, housing associations are facing significant decisions about st...
Over recent decades the UK has seen an increasing shift in housing tenure away from privately or soc...
The global rhetoric surrounding the role of private markets in the provision of new housing masks a ...
Regulatory governance involves the use of heterogeneous mechanisms to extract welfare gains from mar...
This paper explores the emergence of housing strategies at the regional level in England in the cont...
This paper develops a tiered geography of local housing market areas (HMAs) that provides a national...
Set against a background of enduring austerity and an accelerating housing crisis, local authorities...
This paper argues that narratives of the Big Society and Localism in England enacted through housing...
Originally seen as the ‘third arm’ of UK housing policy, the independent, not-for-profit housing ass...
This paper considers the impact of existing land use patterns on housing supply price elasticities i...
The global rhetoric surrounding the role of private markets in the provision of new housing masks a ...
Much of mainstream economic analysis assumes that markets adjust smoothly, through prices, to change...
The government wants 3m houses built by 2020. Economic theory tells us their locations matter for li...
This chapter presents the concept of a ‘housing market arena’, which offers an alternative to the co...