The homeownership rate in the United States has continuously been about 20 percentage points higher than that of Germany. This homeownership gap is traced back to before the First World War at the urban level. Existing approaches, relying on socio-economic factors, demographics, culture or housing policy, cannot explain the persistence of these differences in homeownership. This article fills this explanatory gap by making a path-dependence argument: it argues that nineteenth-century urban conditions either began to create the American suburbanized single-family house cities or compact multi-unit-building cities, as in Germany. US cities developed differently from German ones because they lacked feudal shackles, were governed as “private ci...
This study examined how different urbanization patterns in France and the United States influenced t...
This article addresses the social history of suburbanization in America in the twentieth century by ...
Housing patterns in the United States have changed over time. During the first part of the nation’s ...
On the eve of the financial crisis, the USA was inhabited by almost 70 percent homeowning households...
The thesis gives an answer to the question of why different countries ended up with different rates ...
Contemporary Western cities are not uniform, but display a variety of different housing forms and te...
Contemporary Western cities are not uniform, but display a variety of different housing forms and te...
Contemporary Western cities are not uniform but display a variety of different housing forms and ten...
Comparative welfare and production regime literature has so far neglected the considerable cross-cou...
European and American cities grappled with severe housing and sanitation problems during the rapid u...
In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, America experienced tremendous development and growth as ...
In this paper, we argue that the complexion of housing finance systems in OECD countries, both now a...
The world has still to emerge fully from the housing-triggered Global Financial Crisis, but housing ...
Homeownership rates in suburbs are much higher than in central cities. This paper shows that the sys...
During the late nineteenth century the rapidly expanding urban population of the United States creat...
This study examined how different urbanization patterns in France and the United States influenced t...
This article addresses the social history of suburbanization in America in the twentieth century by ...
Housing patterns in the United States have changed over time. During the first part of the nation’s ...
On the eve of the financial crisis, the USA was inhabited by almost 70 percent homeowning households...
The thesis gives an answer to the question of why different countries ended up with different rates ...
Contemporary Western cities are not uniform, but display a variety of different housing forms and te...
Contemporary Western cities are not uniform, but display a variety of different housing forms and te...
Contemporary Western cities are not uniform but display a variety of different housing forms and ten...
Comparative welfare and production regime literature has so far neglected the considerable cross-cou...
European and American cities grappled with severe housing and sanitation problems during the rapid u...
In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, America experienced tremendous development and growth as ...
In this paper, we argue that the complexion of housing finance systems in OECD countries, both now a...
The world has still to emerge fully from the housing-triggered Global Financial Crisis, but housing ...
Homeownership rates in suburbs are much higher than in central cities. This paper shows that the sys...
During the late nineteenth century the rapidly expanding urban population of the United States creat...
This study examined how different urbanization patterns in France and the United States influenced t...
This article addresses the social history of suburbanization in America in the twentieth century by ...
Housing patterns in the United States have changed over time. During the first part of the nation’s ...