EPISODE · Apr 3, 2024 · 57 MIN
Ep 69: Low-Income Housing and 'Crowd Out' with Michael Eriksen
from UCLA Housing Voice · host UCLA Lewis Center for Regional Policy Studies
Subsidized affordable housing development reduces costs for lower-income households directly. It also reduces costs indirectly, by increasing the overall supply of housing — or does it? Michael Eriksen joins to discuss the issue of “crowd out” in affordable housing production.Show notes:Eriksen, M. D., & Rosenthal, S. S. (2010). Crowd out effects of place-based subsidized rental housing: New evidence from the LIHTC program. Journal of Public Economics, 94(11-12), 953-966.Cummings, J. L., & DiPasquale, D. (1999). The Low‐Income Housing Tax Credit: An analysis of the first ten years. Housing Policy Debate, 10(2), 251-307.Click here for Pathways Home, our eight-part series on homelessness.Baum-Snow, N., & Marion, J. (2009). The effects of low income housing tax credit developments on neighborhoods. Journal of Public Economics, 93(5-6), 654-666.Diamond, R., & McQuade, T. (2019). Who wants affordable housing in their backyard? An equilibrium analysis of low-income property development. Journal of Political Economy, 127(3), 1063-1117.
What this episode covers
Subsidized affordable housing development reduces costs for lower-income households directly. It also reduces costs indirectly, by increasing the overall supply of housing — or does it? Michael Eriksen joins to discuss the issue of “crowd out” in affordable housing production. Show notes: Eriksen, M. D., & Rosenthal, S. S. (2010). Crowd out effects of place-based subsidized rental housing: New evidence from the LIHTC program. Journal of Public Economics, 94(11-12), 953-966.Cummings, J. L...
NOW PLAYING
Ep 69: Low-Income Housing and 'Crowd Out' with Michael Eriksen
No transcript for this episode yet
Similar Episodes
Feb 17, 2026 ·56m
Feb 10, 2026 ·50m
Feb 3, 2026 ·47m
Jan 27, 2026 ·51m
Jan 20, 2026 ·54m