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Making Housing more Affordable: The Role of Intermediate Tenures

ISBN: 978-1-444-34088-4

January 2011

Wiley-Blackwell

328 pages

Description
The movement away from traditional rented approaches to meeting the housing needs of those on modest incomes has taken on new momentum in the latest economic cycle. 

This book answers some of the questions around affordable housing and low cost home ownership, and whether these intermediate tenures have the potential to play a longer term role in achieving sustainable housing markets.

The editors clarify the principles on which the development of affordable housing and intermediate tenures has been based; analyse the policy instruments used to implement these ideas; and make a preliminary assessment of their longer tem value to households and governments alike.

Making Housing More Affordable: the role of intermediate tenures brings together an evidence base for researchers and policy makers as they assess past experience and work to understand future options. 

The book draws mainly on experience of the intermediate housing market in England but also on examples of policies that have been implemented across the world. It clarifies both the challenges and the achievements of governments in providing a well operating intermediate market that can help meet the fundamental goal of ‘a decent home for every household at a price within their means’. 

The first section outlines the principles and practice of intermediate housing and examines the instruments and mechanisms by which it has been provided internationally. The next section estimates who might benefit from being in intermediate housing and projects the take-up of different products in the future. Section III examines the supply side and Section IV introduces some case studies of who gets what.  The final section looks at how effectively the intermediate market operates over the economic cycle.

About the Author

Sarah Monk, Deputy Director, Cambridge Centre for Housing and Planning Research Department of Land Economy University of Cambridge, UK

Christine Whitehead, Department of Economics, London School of Economics, UK

Features
• edited by the leading academics in this field with key researchers on their author team
• the central topic is one of the most policy-relevant issues in the field, worldwide
• includes comparative international research
• provides a useful integrative framework to a range of academic themes