Since the beginning of the 1990s, growth in privately rented housing in England and Wales began to reverse a prolonged period of decline. In high-cost housing areas the sector is increasingly acting as a stop-gap for those seeking to enter owner-occupation, while in less economically buoyant areas it is accommodating households who would previously have been more likely to live in social housing. This paper reveals that some of the strongest proportional growth in the sector has been in less prosperous areas where it has traditionally been under-represented and that the sector is housing an increasing proportion of economically inactive tenants. However, in key cities, particularly London, the sector’s growth has been influenced by increasi...
This paper considers the impact of existing land use patterns on housing supply price elasticities i...
Renting privately is a minority tenure in the UK, but the sector is recognised as being essential to...
This is the final version of the article. It first appeared from Taylor & Francis via https://doi.or...
Since the beginning of the 1990s, growth in privately rented housing in England and Wales began to r...
The low level of residential mobility in England, particularly in the social sector, has been a cont...
The size of the private rented sector in London was considerably larger than other regions in 2001 (...
This paper considers changes in the housing market and housing policy following the major deregulati...
Over the last two decades, private renting has undergone a major revival in the UK, more than doubli...
A recent change in the geography of poverty in Britain has been reported: it appears to be becoming ...
Problems related to unpopular housing are not new in Britain's social rented sector. In the past, ho...
This article examines the special role of the private rented sector in the provision of housing in L...
In 2011 some 26.5% of London dwellings were rented (vs 16.7% in the rest of England) —a near-doublin...
Over recent decades the UK has seen an increasing shift in housing tenure away from privately or soc...
Over the last two decades, private renting has undergone a major revival in the UK, more than doubli...
Set against a background of enduring austerity and an accelerating housing crisis, local authorities...
This paper considers the impact of existing land use patterns on housing supply price elasticities i...
Renting privately is a minority tenure in the UK, but the sector is recognised as being essential to...
This is the final version of the article. It first appeared from Taylor & Francis via https://doi.or...
Since the beginning of the 1990s, growth in privately rented housing in England and Wales began to r...
The low level of residential mobility in England, particularly in the social sector, has been a cont...
The size of the private rented sector in London was considerably larger than other regions in 2001 (...
This paper considers changes in the housing market and housing policy following the major deregulati...
Over the last two decades, private renting has undergone a major revival in the UK, more than doubli...
A recent change in the geography of poverty in Britain has been reported: it appears to be becoming ...
Problems related to unpopular housing are not new in Britain's social rented sector. In the past, ho...
This article examines the special role of the private rented sector in the provision of housing in L...
In 2011 some 26.5% of London dwellings were rented (vs 16.7% in the rest of England) —a near-doublin...
Over recent decades the UK has seen an increasing shift in housing tenure away from privately or soc...
Over the last two decades, private renting has undergone a major revival in the UK, more than doubli...
Set against a background of enduring austerity and an accelerating housing crisis, local authorities...
This paper considers the impact of existing land use patterns on housing supply price elasticities i...
Renting privately is a minority tenure in the UK, but the sector is recognised as being essential to...
This is the final version of the article. It first appeared from Taylor & Francis via https://doi.or...