Journal of Political Institutions and Political Economy > Vol 5 > Issue 1

What State Housing Policies Do Voters Want? Evidence from a Platform-Choice Experiment

Christopher S. Elmendorf, Martin Luther King Jr. Professor, School of Law, University of California, Davis, USA, cselmendorf@ucdavis.edu , Clayton Nall, Department of Political Science, University of California, Santa Barbara, USA, nall@ucsb.edu , Stan Oklobdzija, Department of Political Science and Director of The Center for Public Policy Research, The Murphy Institute, Tulane University, USA, stano@tulane.edu
 
Suggested Citation
Christopher S. Elmendorf, Clayton Nall and Stan Oklobdzija (2024), "What State Housing Policies Do Voters Want? Evidence from a Platform-Choice Experiment", Journal of Political Institutions and Political Economy: Vol. 5: No. 1, pp 117-152. http://dx.doi.org/10.1561/113.00000096

Publication Date: 02 Sep 2024
© 2024 C. S. Elmendorf, C. Nall, and S. Oklobdzija
 
Subjects
Political psychology,  Public opinion,  Public policy,  State politics,  Voting behavior
 
Keywords
Housing policyhousing attitudespublic opinionstate politicslocal politics
 

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In this article:
Introduction 
Why Public Support for Housing Production May Be Weaker Than It First Appears 
Data and Methods 
Results 
Conclusion 
References 

Abstract

How much has rising political attention to problems of housing affordability translated into support for market-rate housing development? A tacit assumption of YIMBY (“Yes In My Backyard”) activists is that more public attention to housing affordability will engender more support for their policy agenda of removing regulatory barriers to dense market-rate housing. Yet recent research finds that the mass public has little conviction that more housing supply would improve affordability, which in turn raises questions about the depth of public support for supply-side policies relative to price controls, demand subsidies, or restrictions on “Wall Street” investors, to name a few. In a national survey of 5,000 urban and suburban voters, we elicited perceptions of the efficacy of a wide range of potential state policies for “helping people get housing they can afford.” We also asked respondents whether they support various housing and non-housing policies. Finally, as a way of estimating the revealed importance of housing-policy preferences relative to the more conventional grist of state politics, we elicited preferences over randomized, three-policy platforms. In a set of results that recall the politics of the inflation-ridden 1970s, we find that homeowners and renters alike support price controls, demand subsidies, restrictions on Wall Street buyers, and subsidized affordable housing. The revealed-preference results further suggest, contrary to our expectations, that price controls and anti “Wall Street” restrictions are very important to voters. Contrary to the recommendations of housing economists and other experts, allowing more market-rate housing is regarded as ineffective and draws only middling levels of public support. Opponents of market-rate housing development also care more about the issue than do supporters. Finally, we show that people who claim that housing is very important to them do not have distinctive housing-policy preferences.

DOI:10.1561/113.00000096

Online Appendix | 113.00000096_app.pdf

This is the article's accompanying appendix.

DOI: 10.1561/113.00000096_app

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Journal of Political Institutions and Political Economy, Volume 5, Issue 1 Special Issue - The Political Economy of Housing: Articles Overiew
See the other articles that are part of this special issue.