Cities like New York and San Francisco give massive contributions to the nation’s overall economy, with 380 U.S. metro areas generating 90% of the total GDP in 2012.
But a new study found that these cities can actually be making much more—a hefty $1.6 trillion more, to be exact. So why isn’t this money being generated? The answer is the lack of affordable housing inventory in urban areas.
Economists Chang-Tai Hsieh from the University of Chicago and Enrico Moretti of the University of California at Berkeley have placed a price tag on restrictive urban land use policies, The Atlantic’s CityLab reports.
According to CityLab, Hsieh and Moretti’s research is the first of its kind to develop a “defensible estimate” of the costs constrained development, such as antiquated zoning and building codes, have on the U.S. economy.
The $1.6 trillion figure was extrapolated from an analysis on the economic contribution of 220 metros to the overall U.S. economic growth over more than five decades, supplemented with data on the characteristics of workers from the American Community Survey and the Current Population Survey.
What they found was that “too much of America’s urban economic power is simply being wasted on higher housing bills.”
Related Stories
| Nov 6, 2019
Passive House senior high-rise uses structural thermal breaks to insulate steel penetrations
Built to International Passive House standards, the Corona Senior Residence in Queens, N.Y., prevents thermal bridging between interior and exterior steel structures by insulating canopies and rooftop supports where they penetrate the building envelope.
Multifamily Housing | Nov 5, 2019
The Collective Paper Factory is the co-living company’s first U.S. location
The building offers a stay model ranging from one night to 29 days.
Multifamily Housing | Nov 4, 2019
A historic ice cream factory now provides Milwaukee with affordable housing
Thanks to projects like this, the Lindsay Heights neighborhood is definitely on the upswing.
Multifamily Housing | Oct 31, 2019
Soltra at SanTan Village breaks ground in Arizona
Todd & Associates designed the project.
| Oct 30, 2019
James McHugh Construction breaks ground on 1000M, Michigan Avenue’s tallest tower to be
McHugh will start work on the 832-foot-tall residential 1000M tower in December 2019.
| Oct 30, 2019
The Beach Company acquires land for multifamily community in Chattanooga
River Rock project will add 163 apartments near the Tennessee River in Chattanooga’s downtown riverfront district.
Multifamily Housing | Oct 30, 2019
Techno-magnet: Multifamily development attracts top tech workers, students
Proto Kendall Square is wooing grad students and millennial STEM workers from what’s arguably ‘the most innovative square mile on the planet.’
Multifamily Housing | Oct 25, 2019
Chicago’s long-gestating luxury condo tower nears construction
Helmut Jahn designed the project.
Multifamily Housing | Oct 24, 2019
Webster Green brings affordable and supportive housing to the Bronx
Magnusson Architecture and Planning designed the building.
| Oct 22, 2019
Ben Seager, AIA, Named KTGY’s New 75+ Service-Enriched National Practice Area Leader
Ben Seager, AIA, Named KTGY’s New 75+ Service-Enriched National Practice Area Leader