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Matter of Opinion

Are You Contributing to America’s Affordable Housing Crisis?

Matter of Opinion

New York Times Opinion

Society & Culture, Ross Douthat, News, New York Times, Journalism

4.27.2K Ratings

🗓️ 6 October 2021

⏱️ 36 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Rent is soaring, but close to two-thirds of renters remain on leases because of financial reasons. In 2019, nearly 70 percent of millennials surveyed said that they could not afford to buy a home on account of rising prices, and the number of people in the United States without shelter has increased by about 30 percent in the past five years. We’re in a housing crisis. There’s a ton of debate on how we should go about solving these issues, particularly in dense cities. People who are for building more housing units in cities argue that zoning restrictions should be reduced, which would increase the number of homes, ideally allowing supply to keep up with demand. On the other hand, some residents support strict land use regulations that prevent further development in their areas. Today, Matt Yglesias, a D.C. resident, and Joel Kotkin, who lives in California, join host Jane Coaston to talk about the pros and cons of building more housing and single-family zoning and why moving to the suburbs isn’t the only answer. Also, the Times columnist Jamelle Bouie tells Jane about zoning policy in his city, Charlottesville, Va. Mentioned in this episode: “Building Housing — Lots of It — Will Lay the Foundation for a New Future” by Matt Yglesias on Vox “In Defense of Houses” by Joel Kotkin, published in City Journal “How Blue Cities Became So Outrageously Unaffordable,” an interview with the Vox policy reporter Jerusalem Demsas on “The Ezra Klein Show”

Transcript

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0:00.0

Today on the argument, where should Americans live?

0:08.0

I don't know if you've heard this, but America is running out of affordable places to live.

0:12.9

If you've lived in any city for the past five years, this likely isn't news to you.

0:18.1

Why?

0:19.1

It's a combination of strict zoning policies, changes in demand and supply, and growing inaccessibility

0:25.0

for low-income families, among a lot of other factors.

0:31.8

I'm Jane Kostin, and I live in Washington, DC.

0:35.0

For the amount of space you get, the city with a growing population and a cap on how tall

0:39.2

buildings can be, rent is preposterous here.

0:43.2

But I like living in DC.

0:46.0

And DC isn't the only city in the United States where people are sandwiched between

0:49.6

unaffordable rent and limited space.

0:52.2

So we know we need more housing, but everyone disagrees about what kind of housing, where

0:57.8

to put it, and how to do this.

1:01.4

Matthew Glacias, my fellow DC resident, thinks we should expand within city parameters and

1:06.5

regulations should allow that to happen.

1:09.5

California resident Joel Kotkin has a different proposition.

1:12.5

How about the suburbs?

1:15.0

But before we look at solutions, we need to talk about what the housing crises are.

1:20.3

Yes, crises, as in plural.

1:24.2

We started off with Matt.

1:25.4

There are many, many crises.

...

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