Overall, the manifestos confirm that all parties are unwilling to face up to the political problems they perceive would follow if they advocated solutions that might effectively address the crisis of housing supply. The illness is real but all that is on offer is snake oil; displacement activities treating some symptoms but not the underlying causes and – paradoxically – having the net effect of making the housing crisis worse, writes Paul Cheshire
Last week saw the concomitant announcement of the government’s intention to build almost half a mill...
Housing affordability is a key concern of an ever-larger fraction of UK voters who are crammed into ...
There is a housing crisis in England, writ large in London, and it is a crisis of supply. Paul Chesh...
Posted by Paul Cheshire, SERC and LSE The British housing market, especially the English housing mar...
Posted by Paul Cheshire, LSE and SERC We all know there is a housing crisis. The latest data show th...
Housing is turning the UK into a land of opportunities for overseas investors but failing its own ci...
The publication of the political party manifestos should have been a welcome moment for clear thinki...
What lies behind Britain’s crisis of housing affordability? As Paul Cheshire explains, it is nothing...
The government’s housing policy has been controversial. Some applaud Help to Buy for kickstarting ac...
Posted by Paul Cheshire, LSE & SERC The RICS recently called for a big boost to building houses spec...
While politicians of all stripes talk about the need to build more homes, very little detail has bee...
This paper provides a critical perspective on England’s housing crisis, characterised here as a conc...
Recent reports of shortages of housing supply in the UK may raise concerns about rising rents and ho...
There is a paradox in modern housing policy, writes Daniel Bentley. The aim of rolling back the stat...
[Posted by Prof Henry G. Overman] As the housing crisis continues, politicians continue to say silly...
Last week saw the concomitant announcement of the government’s intention to build almost half a mill...
Housing affordability is a key concern of an ever-larger fraction of UK voters who are crammed into ...
There is a housing crisis in England, writ large in London, and it is a crisis of supply. Paul Chesh...
Posted by Paul Cheshire, SERC and LSE The British housing market, especially the English housing mar...
Posted by Paul Cheshire, LSE and SERC We all know there is a housing crisis. The latest data show th...
Housing is turning the UK into a land of opportunities for overseas investors but failing its own ci...
The publication of the political party manifestos should have been a welcome moment for clear thinki...
What lies behind Britain’s crisis of housing affordability? As Paul Cheshire explains, it is nothing...
The government’s housing policy has been controversial. Some applaud Help to Buy for kickstarting ac...
Posted by Paul Cheshire, LSE & SERC The RICS recently called for a big boost to building houses spec...
While politicians of all stripes talk about the need to build more homes, very little detail has bee...
This paper provides a critical perspective on England’s housing crisis, characterised here as a conc...
Recent reports of shortages of housing supply in the UK may raise concerns about rising rents and ho...
There is a paradox in modern housing policy, writes Daniel Bentley. The aim of rolling back the stat...
[Posted by Prof Henry G. Overman] As the housing crisis continues, politicians continue to say silly...
Last week saw the concomitant announcement of the government’s intention to build almost half a mill...
Housing affordability is a key concern of an ever-larger fraction of UK voters who are crammed into ...
There is a housing crisis in England, writ large in London, and it is a crisis of supply. Paul Chesh...