Analyses of the impact of the Global Financial Crisis (GFC) on housing have largely focused on subprime mortgages and homeownership. By contrast, the impact of the financial crisis on the private rented sector has received much less attention. This paper helps to address that gap by examining the impact of the GFC on private renting in Britain. In recent years, the private rented sector (PRS) in Britain has grown in size after many years of decline; and the formal rules and informal practices that characterize this tenure have also changed significantly. This transformation began during the 1990s but the pace of change increased from the turn of the century and accelerated still further during the GFC. Drawing on an historical institutional...
Homeownership has been declining in favour of private renting in most developed English speaking cou...
This paper will consider the political and ideological background to the ‘ credit crunch’ and will c...
In 2008, it became clear that the pre-crisis growth model of privatised Keynesianism was at least te...
After decades of decline, private renting has started to expand again in some European countries, of...
The impacts of the global financial crisis continue to reverberate around the world. This paper expl...
Private rental markets have become increasingly important since the Global Financial Crisis 2008–200...
Noting the recent resurgence of housing as a political issue, this article takes a historic view of ...
© 2018 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group In 2008, it became clear that the pre...
Private rental markets have become increasingly important since the Global Financial Crisis 2008-200...
The UK Coalition government, formed in 2010, has set in place major housing policy reforms. Its obje...
Since the beginning of the 1990s, growth in privately rented housing in England and Wales began to r...
During the period of the Thatcher and Major governments, 1979–97, Conservative housing policy reduce...
Efforts to stimulate reinvestment in the private rented sector in Britain began in the late 1980s. I...
Abstract. The 1988 Housing Act signalled substantial changes in the provision of social housing in E...
The private rented sector (PRS) recently enjoyed a revival, in particular in the years before and af...
Homeownership has been declining in favour of private renting in most developed English speaking cou...
This paper will consider the political and ideological background to the ‘ credit crunch’ and will c...
In 2008, it became clear that the pre-crisis growth model of privatised Keynesianism was at least te...
After decades of decline, private renting has started to expand again in some European countries, of...
The impacts of the global financial crisis continue to reverberate around the world. This paper expl...
Private rental markets have become increasingly important since the Global Financial Crisis 2008–200...
Noting the recent resurgence of housing as a political issue, this article takes a historic view of ...
© 2018 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group In 2008, it became clear that the pre...
Private rental markets have become increasingly important since the Global Financial Crisis 2008-200...
The UK Coalition government, formed in 2010, has set in place major housing policy reforms. Its obje...
Since the beginning of the 1990s, growth in privately rented housing in England and Wales began to r...
During the period of the Thatcher and Major governments, 1979–97, Conservative housing policy reduce...
Efforts to stimulate reinvestment in the private rented sector in Britain began in the late 1980s. I...
Abstract. The 1988 Housing Act signalled substantial changes in the provision of social housing in E...
The private rented sector (PRS) recently enjoyed a revival, in particular in the years before and af...
Homeownership has been declining in favour of private renting in most developed English speaking cou...
This paper will consider the political and ideological background to the ‘ credit crunch’ and will c...
In 2008, it became clear that the pre-crisis growth model of privatised Keynesianism was at least te...