Writing in yesterday's Guardian, Larry Elliot suggests that the result in Bradford West was a symptom of the North-South divide. I don't intend to comment on that particular hypothesis but I was struck by his broader point: 'Britain is not alone in having depressed regions, but nowhere else is the problem so big and the desire to fix it so small'
Posted by Paul Cheshire, SERC It does not take great economic insight to realise that Britain, espec...
What lies behind Britain’s crisis of housing affordability? As Paul Cheshire explains, it is nothing...
Interesting to see Grant Shapps talking about house prices yesterday. He suggests we need a period o...
The recent housing boom was unprecedented in magnitude and duration. According to Philippe Bracke, t...
Posted by Paul Cheshire, SERC and LSE The British housing market, especially the English housing mar...
Recent reports of shortages of housing supply in the UK may raise concerns about rising rents and ho...
Writing in yesterday's Guardian, Larry Elliot suggests that the result in Bradford West was a sympto...
I was never much good at "up-and-down" economics and couldn't tell you what today's house building s...
The government’s housing policy has been controversial. Some applaud Help to Buy for kickstarting ac...
The National Housing Federation is warning that 'the housing market will be plunged into crisis with...
The most recent American Economic Review has a set of interesting papers on 'Very Local House Price ...
Posted by Paul Cheshire, LSE and SERC We all know there is a housing crisis. The latest data show th...
There are mixed responses to signs that the UK’s housing market is recovering from the 2007-08 depre...
I wrote recently about unresolved conflicts in the government's approach to planning, economic growt...
John Redwood (henceforth, JR) has been offering his thoughts on the housing crisis and attempting to...
Posted by Paul Cheshire, SERC It does not take great economic insight to realise that Britain, espec...
What lies behind Britain’s crisis of housing affordability? As Paul Cheshire explains, it is nothing...
Interesting to see Grant Shapps talking about house prices yesterday. He suggests we need a period o...
The recent housing boom was unprecedented in magnitude and duration. According to Philippe Bracke, t...
Posted by Paul Cheshire, SERC and LSE The British housing market, especially the English housing mar...
Recent reports of shortages of housing supply in the UK may raise concerns about rising rents and ho...
Writing in yesterday's Guardian, Larry Elliot suggests that the result in Bradford West was a sympto...
I was never much good at "up-and-down" economics and couldn't tell you what today's house building s...
The government’s housing policy has been controversial. Some applaud Help to Buy for kickstarting ac...
The National Housing Federation is warning that 'the housing market will be plunged into crisis with...
The most recent American Economic Review has a set of interesting papers on 'Very Local House Price ...
Posted by Paul Cheshire, LSE and SERC We all know there is a housing crisis. The latest data show th...
There are mixed responses to signs that the UK’s housing market is recovering from the 2007-08 depre...
I wrote recently about unresolved conflicts in the government's approach to planning, economic growt...
John Redwood (henceforth, JR) has been offering his thoughts on the housing crisis and attempting to...
Posted by Paul Cheshire, SERC It does not take great economic insight to realise that Britain, espec...
What lies behind Britain’s crisis of housing affordability? As Paul Cheshire explains, it is nothing...
Interesting to see Grant Shapps talking about house prices yesterday. He suggests we need a period o...