A BROADER ISSUE Global Perspectives on

1 Democratising Prosperity: Global Perspectives on Housing Affordability Presentation to the Urban Consolidation Seminar Adelaide By Wendell Cox 29 Ju...

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A BROADER ISSUE

Democratising Prosperity: Global Perspectives on Housing Affordability

The issue is not… not… Land use Cities The issue is… is… Quality of Life

The Great Greek Dream Athens

Social Equity

Presentation to the Urban Consolidation Seminar Adelaide By Wendell Cox 29 July 2005

Future of the Nation

Housing Affordability Crisis in Australia

Housing Affordability in the USA

EXAMPLE OF ADELAIDE

THE RULE, NOT THE EXCEPTION

160% 140%

Inflation Adjusted

Median House Price

120% 100% 80% 60%

GDP per Capita (AUS)

40% 20% 0% -20%

1981

1986

1991

1996

2001

OUTLINE Nicolai Ceaucescu Father of Smart Growth

Social Housing Bucharest

UNDERSTANDING “URBAN SPRAWL”

The American Dream St. Louis 23 July 2005

The Anti-Sprawl Theology CONDEMNING WHAT THEY DON’T UNDERSTAND

Understanding “Urban Sprawl”

Public Transport: Hopeless Rhetoric

Not enough people going to the same place at the same time

PUBLIC TRANSPORT: HOPELESS RHETORIC

Don Valley Parkway & Commuter Rail Toronto

Democratizing Prosperity

BACKGROUND: DEMOCRATISING PROSPERITY Swedish Dream Stockholm

The Role of Home Ownership

HOME OWNERSHIP AND PROSPERITY Japanese Dream Sapporo

Threatening the Dream

THREATENING THE GREAT AUSTRALIAN DREAM Spanish Dream Barcelona

Preserving the Dream

PRESERVING THE GREAT AUSTRALIAN DREAM Portuguese Dream Porto

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NOT A BRIEF FOR SPRAWL LONE MOUNTAIN COMPACT

The Great German Dream Leipzig

Understanding Urban Sprawl

Sprawling Paris 1954-1999

Paris to Tourists & Urban Planners

Paris: Avenue de l’opéra

Tourist Paris is Not Paris DIFFERENCE BETWEEN AUSTRALIA & EUROPE: HISTORY

Population 82% Outside City of Paris

“ … absent a material threat to other individuals or the community, people should be allowed to live and work where and how they like.”

Employment 67% Outside City of Paris

Paris Missed by Tourists & Planners

The Great French Dream Paris

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Milan

MODERN “SPRAWL” SPRAWL” = AUTO ORIENTED DEVELOPMENT

Paris Atlas Where People Live and Work Æ

Merriam Webster: “the spreading of urban developments on undeveloped land near a city” city”

Toronto

Sprawl is “suburbanisation.” suburbanisation.” Tourist (& Planner’s) Map of Paris Æ

Sprawl is “urban growth” growth” – nearly all urban growth in the highhigh-income world has been suburban in recent decades.

Tokyo

Sprawl = Automobile oriented development (especially in Australia, the US, Canada, Western Europe and Japan).

Portland

Australia: No Shortage of Land

History of Urban Growth Is the History of Sprawl

AGRICULTURE & FARM LAND: 1981-2002

500 450 400 350 300 250 200 150 100 50 0

The Great Australian Dream Melbourne

Hectares (x1,000,000

Reduction= Land Area of Victoria, Tasmania + South Island (NZ)

1981

2002

Urban Area Densities

The Declining Human Footprint

AUSTRALIAN & NEW WORLD SIMILARITIES

MIRRORS TREND IN CANADA & UNITED STATES

3,000 SURPRISES Sydney More Sprawling than Los Angeles Los Angeles Least Sprawling in New World

2,500 2,000

Urbanisation Å2001 (<0.3%) Human Æ Footprint Reduction 1981-2002

1,500 Agriculture & Urban

1,000

Urban Population Per Square Kilometer

500 0 la At a nt

rth Pe

ne ba is Br

n to on m Ed

d

es

ne ur bo el

de ai el Ad

M

n la ck Au

ey dn Sy

l ge An

o nt ro To

s Lo

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Universality of Auto-Based Sprawl

Urban Areas: Historical Densities

URBAN DENSITIES COMPARED TO PRE-AUTO ERA

40,000 Paris

35,000

20,000 18,000 16,000 14,000 12,000 10,000 8,000 6,000 4,000 2,000 0

Population per Square Kilometer

London

30,000 25,000 20,000

New York

15,000 10,000 5,000

Los Angeles

0 1800

1850

1900

1950

2000

The Great Romanian Nightmare Bucharest

Urban Population Per Square Kilometer

1900

Now

Pre-Auto

Japan

W. Europe

Australia

Canada

U.S.

Toronto Area Green Belt Plan MUCH PAIN, LITTLE GAIN Additional 2031 “Smart Growth” 2000 Land Area

Additional 2031 “Business as Usual”

Ceaucescu: Understood Curbing Sprawl FATHER OF URBAN CONSOLIDATION

The Automobile is Here to Stay NO ONE PROPOSES RETURN TO PRE-AUTO ERA

100% 90% 80% 70% 60% 50% 40% 30% 20% 10% 0%

Share of Motorized Travel Urban Areas Over 3,000,000

Restore Public Transport City? REJECT AUTO BASED URBAN AREA?

• No serious proposals. • Would require dismantling more than 85% of urban area & resettlement. • Auto oriented urban area is here to stay.

Australia

Western Europe

Canada

United States

Asia

• Densification worsens the quality of life.

4

Suburbanisation Dilutes Congestion

Suburbanisation Speeds Traffic Up

TRAFFIC INTENSITY IN WORLD URBAN AREAS

4,500 4,000 3,500 3,000 2,500 2,000 1,500 1,000 500 0

TRAFFIC SPEEDS IN WORLD URBAN AREAS

60 Vehicle Hours/ Square Kilometer By Population Density

1990: KM/H by Population Density

50 40 30 20 10

Under 750

750-1,999

2,000-3,999 4,000-7,999

8,000 & Over

Suburbanisation: Shorter Work Trips INTERNATIONAL EXAMPLES

0 Under 750

750-1,999

2,000-3,999

4,000-7,999 8,000 & Over

More Air Pollution at Lower Speeds Based Upon Index of 1.00 at Lowest Point for Each Pollutant By Miles per KM

25

60 50

20

40

15

30

10

20

CO

10

5

0 Dallas-Fort Houston Worth

Los Angeles

Atlanta

Sydney

Paris

Tokyo

NOx

CO NMHC

NOx

VOC

0

“Jobs“Jobs-Housing Balance” Myth THE RECORD Hong Kong: Average Work Trip 7.7 KM

Other Location 17.9%

Job Lo cation 17.9%

Neighborhood 25.9%

Other Reasons 17.7%

House 20.5%

Reason for Neighborhood Choice US Census Survey

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Urban Villages: Insignificant & Futile

Exaggerating Suburban Costs

”JOBS-HOUSING BALANCE:” THE RECORD

US SUBURBS LESS EXPENSIVE THAN CORES

$350

>700 USA Municipalities Fees/Capita: 2000

$300 $250 Water

Average Work Trip Distance Welwyn Residents

Welwyn

$200 $150 $100 $50

Example: London Area New Towns

Sewer Density 3.020

Density 1,880

Density 1,090

Density 800

Core (1939)

Ring 1: 1959

Ring 2: 1979

Ring 3: Later

$0

Suburban Cost Research

Suburban Cost Research

U.S.A. “CANNOT AFFORD” SUBURBANIZATION?

“ILL INFORMED & DISINGENUOUS”

• How did we manage to afford the last 60 years? • Bankrupt suburbs predictions: 1960s • Studies: Theoretical, not real data. • $225 billion US cost claim (to 2025) $30 per capita annually

NOT SINCE COPERNICUS … has the conventional wisdom been so wrong.

“… if the urban policies … were not so ill informed and presented in such a disingenuous way, there would not be a need for this contribution to the debate on Australia’ Australia’s cities” cities” - Patrick Troy (The (The Perils of Urban Consolidation). Consolidation).

Factors Driving Suburbanisation IT IS MORE THAN POPULATION GROWTH • Strong PostPost-War population growth • People moving from rural areas to urban areas • Housing growth well above population growth Average household size down 1/3 • Larger, more efficient commercial structures

no imperative has been demonstrated.

• Employment growth well above population growth Contributing factor: More women in the workforce • Affluence

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“Smart Growth” On the Retreat

Not All You Hear is True

NEWS SLOW TO REACH AUSTRALIA?

LOS ANGELES TRAVEL BEFORE & AFTER RAIL

200

450,000 400,000 350,000

Portland Urban Growth Boundary: Acres

300,000 250,000 200,000 150,000 100,000 50,000

1997

Public Æ Transport

175 2040 Plan

Actual 2004

Trend 2040

Å Public Transport

150 125

Å1989-2003Æ OPENED

100

Other Smart Growth “Climbdowns” Maryland Portland New Jersey Vote Against Minneapolis-St. Paul Density Suburban Washington

0

75 50

Auto

25 0

1 Metro Line 3 Light Rail lines 6 Suburban Lines 800 KM A$13 Billion

Before Rail: 1989

Public Transport: Hopeless Rhetoric

Auto

Latest Data: 2003

Public Transport Work Trip Share IMPORTANT TO CBD, A SMALL PART OF THE MARKET

CBD: Work Trip Share

Not enough people going to the same place at the same time

Sydney Area Employment

ÅPublic Transport 70%

CBD 13% Public Transp ort 10%

Outside 87%

Don Valley Parkway & Commuter Rail Toronto

Autos 90%

Elsewhere: Work Trip Share

Skeletal Auto Competitive Transit FOR PORTLAND

Auto Competitive Public Transport ONLY TO DOWNTOWN

Auto Competitive Public Å Transport

7

Urban Density & Transit Competitiveness

Misleading or “Doubtful” Information

HIGH INCOME WORLD URBAN AREAS OVER 3,000,000

UNREALISTIC EXPECTATIONS FOR PUBLIC TRANSPORT

35

CAR COMPATIBLE Å DENSITY

25

TOO DENSE FOR CARS NOT DENSE ENOUGH FOR PUBLIC TRANSPORT

20 15

PUBLIC TRANSPORT COMPATIBLE DENSITY

Population (Millions) Æ

12%

Population/Square KM Æ 30

MELBOURNE 2030 PLAN Reduction of Auto Market Share in Percentage Points Goal is many times previous record

10% 8% 6% 4%

10

2%

2020 Goal

Since 1980

5

0% Melbourne

0 0

10,000

20,000

30,000

40,000

50,000

AntiAnti-Sprawl Policies: Prospects

Boston

Brussels

Zurich

Portland

-2%

Background: Democratising Prosperity

More intense traffic congestion More intense air pollution But worse: Lower home ownership, leading to a lower standard of living

There are Rich Households in all Societies

The Great Swedish Dream Stockholm

What Distinguishes Societies is the Extent of Poverty Overwhelming Reality

Rocinda Favela Rio de Janeiro

Luxury Condos Near Rocinda Favela Rio de Janeiro

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History of the World is the History of Poverty

Affluent Economies Have Achieved a Democratisation of Prosperity $40,000 $35,000 $30,000

United States

GDP-PPP Per Capita 1990$A (OECD)

Japan AustraliaÆ

$25,000 $20,000 $15,000

ÅWestern Europe

$10,000 $5,000

US Poverty Threshold

$0 1870

Economic Progress is Not Automatic The Case of Argentina

1890

1910

1930

1950

1970

1990

Home Ownership and Prosperity

$40,000 $35,000 $30,000

GDP-PPP Per Capita 1990$A (OECD)

United States Japan Australia

$25,000 $20,000

Western Europe

$15,000 $10,000

Argentina

$5,000

US Poverty Threshold

$0 1870

1890

1910

1930

1950

1970

1990

The Great Japanese Dream Sapporo

GDP/Capita: 1990 100% 95% 90% 85% 80% 75% 70% 65% 60% 55% 50%

Discontinuous ÅAxis

100%

Purchasing Power Parity

78% 74%

Australia

GDP/Capita: 2003

80%

80%

72%

UK

USA

France

Sweden

Japan

100% 95% 90% 85% 80% 75% 70% 65% 60% 55% 50%

Discontinuous ÅAxis

76%

Australia

100%

78%

75%

UK

Purchasing Power Parity

73%

USA

France

73%

Sweden

Japan

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STRENGTH OF THE LIBERAL ECONOMIES

Competitive Intensity HOME BUILDING: AUSTRALIA & EUROPE (1990S)

$120 $100 $100

“Competitive intensity”

$80 $75

$60

Examples: Less restrictive land regulation Retailing

$40 $20 $0 Germany

Australia

Competitive Intensity

How Urban Residents Used to Live (And Some Still Do)

ECONOMIC FREEDOM AND AFFLUENCE

Central Athens, 2005

Lisbon, Portugal

Copenhagen, Denmark

Houses: A Principal Share of Wealth ABS: 1996

Home 43%

How Most Urban Residents Live Today Household 17%

Other 21% Savings 12% Securitie s 8% Stockholm, Sweden

Antwerp, Belgium

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Democratisation of Prosperity is Associated with Urban Growth

Democratisation of Prosperity: Associated with Personal Mobility 140

500% 450% 400% 350% 300% 250% 200% 150% 100% 50% 0%

120 Real Per Capita GDP/Household

100

United States Growth x1,000,000

80 Autos per Household

60 40

Urban

20

Rural

0 1939

1971

Democratization of Prosperity is Associated with Suburbanization 120% 100% 80% 60% 40%

Canada from 1951, US from 1950 Others from 1965

20% 0% Canada

United States

Western Europe

1800-1850

2001

Japan

Threatening the Dream

Australasia

1850-1900

1900-1950

1950-2000

Democratisation of Prosperity: Associated with Rising Home Ownership 100% 90% 80% 70% 60% 50% 40% 30% 20% 10% 0%

Renters

Home Owners

1947

2001

BASIC ECONOMIC PRINCIPLE SCARCITY & RATIONING TEND TO RAISE PRICES

This means:

Spanish Dream Barcelona

Rationing land for housing development tends to raise house prices.

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BASIC ECONOMIC PRINCIPLE HIGHER PRICES TEND TO MEAN FEWER BUYERS

Smart Growth: Strategies & Housing Impacts STRATEGIES

EXAMPLES

IMPACTS

Urban Growth Boundaries & Green Belts

Australia Portland Denver London Toronto Northern Virginia, Boston Australia California

Raises housing prices

This means: Higher housing prices tend to lead to lower rates of home ownership.

s ise t” n R es “Su he W s e t in tudi s

Italian Dream Milan

ANDRES DUANY There is NO question that urban growth boundaries and that elaborate environmental public processes increase the cost of housing by creating scarcity. (And don’ don’t tell me otherwise, because I am not stupid, nor am I inexperienced, nor do I have underdeveloped powers of observation).

HARVARD STATE OF THE NATION’S HOUSING 2005 “Development constraints drive up land and construction costs as well as prevent new housing from keeping pace with rising demand.”

Down-zoning Excessive Development Impact Fees

Raises housing prices Raises housing prices

…our evidence suggests that zoning and other land use controls play the dominant role in making housing expensive.

WACHOVIA BANK “We have identified three major factors which have worked to restrain supply over the past decade, all of which remain very much alive and well today. today. The first is the spread of the Smart Growth, Slow Growth and No Growth movements throughout the country.” country.”

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U.S. DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING & URBAN DEVELOPMENT REPORT “A number of Communities … have used smart growth rhetoric to justify restricting growth and limiting developable land supply, which lead to housing cost increases.”

LAND USE REGULATION RETARDS ECONOMIC GROWTH

AN ALARM ON PLANNING IN THE UNITED KINGDOM “The nightmare scenario for the British economy could be that a ‘tipping point’ was reached where the financial services industry of the city decamps to cheaper cities elsewhere in Europe.”

“metropolitan areas with stringent development regulations generate less employment growth than expected given their Industrial bases”

House Price/Income Multiple A SIMPLIFIED MEASURE

US: House/Income Multiple: 1970-2000 GROWTH CONTROLS: LARGEST PRICE ESCALATION

70% 60% • Median house price divided by median household income.

• Permits ready comparison, national and international

50%

Widespread Land Rationing Æ

40% 30% 20%

• Historical value: Approximately 3.0

0% -10% -20%

Average Mississippi North Dakota Arkansas Iowa Louisiana Minnesota Virginia Connecticut New Mexico Kansas Texas Alaska Wyoming Alabama Oklahoma Missouri Ohio Wisconsin South Dakota Nebraska New Jersey Tennessee Georgia Illinois Kentucky Vermont Florida Nevada West Virginia New Hampshire New York South Carolina Maryland Delaware Pennsylvania Indiana Idaho North Carolina Rhode Island Michigan Utah Arizona Maine Montana Hawaii Colorado Massachusetts Washington California Oregon

10%

• Simplified and understandable

13

Housing Affordability: US Urban Areas

US House Multiple: 2000

2000 CENSUS

CENSUS DATA: LARGE URBAN AREAS

6

House Value: Household Income Multiple: 2000 Census

5 4 3 2

Land Rationing

1

4.11 3.15

SAN HOU DFW PGH STL KC TSP IPS PHI ORL VB CIN CPS ATL BAL DET COL PHX CLV NO MIL WD LV RSB CHI MIA PRV SAC DEN POR SEA BOS NY SD LA SJ SF

Í More Affordable

0

5.0 4.5 4.0 3.5 3.0 2.5 2.0 1.5 1.0 0.5 0.0

2.74

Average

Little Land Rationing

Land Rationing

Land Rationing Raises Land Prices International Housing Affordability Ratings And Rankings

500 TIMES INCREASE IN S.E. ENGLAND

£300 £250 £200

Land Price: 90 Hectare Farm Southeast England (Leunig, LSE)

2005.02

£150 £100 £50 £0 Development Not Permitted

Development Permitted

Kiwi Dream Auckland

Housing Cost Multiple: 2004

Housing Cost Escalation in Australia

AUSTRALIA, NZ, CANADA & USA: OVER 1M METRO AREAS

EXAMPLE OF ADELAIDE

10.00

160%

Median House Price/ Median Household Income

8.00 6.00

Fast Growing & Affordable Atlanta Dallas-Fort Worth Houston

140%

Inflation Adjusted

120% 100%

Subsidies Cannot Solve the Problem

80%

4.00

60%

2.00

40% 20%

Land Rationing

GDP per Capita (AUS)

0% BUF RCH STL IPS PGH DFW SAN KC OKC ATL AUS LVL SLC HOU COL OTT NVL CGY MON MEM NO RDU PHX PHI MSP VB POR ORL TSP TOR MIL DEN BAL CHI SEA BOS VAN WD PER SAC LV AUK BRS ADL MEL NYC MIA SF SYD SD LA

0.00

Median House Price

-20%

1981

1986

1991

1996

2001

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Adelaide’s Deteriorating Affordability

Housing Cost Multiple

HOUSING MULTIPLE: RECENT ESCALATION

6.5 6.0 5.5 5.0 4.5 4.0 3.5 3.0 2.5 2.0 1.5 1.0 0.5 0.0

Median House Price/ Median Household Income

10.00

Median House Price/ Median Household Income

8.00 6.00 4.00

Historic Multiple

Adelaide 2000

Adelaide 2004

2.00 SYD

MEL

ADL

BRS

PER

PHX

OTT

HOU

ATL

IPS

DAL

Land Rationing

0.00

Metropolitan Area Population: 2003

CONCEPTUAL MODEL

TALE OF TWO CITIES: ADELAIDE & KANSAS CITY

Millions

Elements of Housing Price Multiple 10

Example Using House US Price to Household Income Multiple: 2004

8

1.4 1.2 1.0

Land Scarcity Premium

6

0.8

1.4

0.6

4

Speculation

2

0.2 LA

SF

MIA

NY

WDC

0.0 BOS

SEA

CHI

PHI

HOU

ATL

1.1

0.4

Underlying Housing Cost to Income Multiple DFW

0

AUSTRALIA & NORTH AMERICA EXAMPLES

Kansas City

Adelaide

Metropolitan Area Growth: 2000-2003

Urban Population Density

TALE OF TWO CITIES: ADELAIDE & KANSAS CITY

TALE OF TWO CITIES: ADELAIDE & KANSAS CITY

1,200 70,000 60,000

1,000

50,000

800

40,000 30,000

Population per Square Kilometer

600

65,000

400

1,100 900

20,000 10,000

17,000

200 0

0 Kansas City

Adelaide

Kansas City

Adelaide

15

Auto & Public Transport Share

Traffic Intensity: 1990

TALE OF TWO CITIES: ADELAIDE & KANSAS CITY

TALE OF TWO CITIES: ADELAIDE & KANSAS CITY

100% 90% 80% 70% 60% 50% 40% 30% 20% 10% 0%

30,000 25,000 20,000 95%

100%

15,000 10,000 5,000

5%

0% Kansas City

0

Adelaide

Kansas City

Adelaide

House Price Multiple: 2004

Conclusions

TALE OF TWO CITIES: ADELAIDE & KANSAS CITY

TALE OF TWO CITIES: ADELAIDE & KANSAS CITY

7.0 6.0

Daily Vehicle Kilometers/ Urban Square Kilometer

• Similar interest rates Low Interest Rates Both Urban Areas

• Adelaide housing affordability much worse

5.0

• Kansas City larger

4.0 6.2

3.0

• Adelaide urban population density higher

2.0 1.0

• Kansas City housing demand greater (faster growth)

2.6

Similar Results for Dallas-Fort Worth, Houston Comparisons with Sydney

0.0 Kansas City

Adelaide

• Both have high auto market shares, but Adelaide has larger public transport share. • Similar traffic intensity, though Kansas City is less.

The Democratisation of Prosperity is not Complete

Preserving the Dream 100% 90% 80% 70% 60% 50% 40% 30% The Great Portuguese Dream Porto

20% 10% 0%

Home Owners

Renters

16

STRONG ECONOMIC GROWTH: IS NECESSARY

Land Rationing: Toward a Nation of Renters: Restoring Inheritance as the Deciding Factor 100% 90% 80% 70% 60% 50% 40% 30% 20% 10% 0%

Renters Eventual Rates Based Upon Housing Price Multiples

Home Owners

70%

40%

Australia Now

Perth Rate

The Great Canadian Dream Toronto

But “Smart Growth:” constitutes an assault on the economy.

15% Sydney Rate

The Great Australian Dream THERE IS NO REASON TO STOP DEMOCRATISING PROSPERITY

LIVING IN THE “FUTURE TENSE”

The Great Spanish Dream Valencia

The Great Australian Dream

The Great Australian Dream

EMERGING IN MEXICO

HAS BECOME THE GREAT UNIVERSAL DREAM

The Great Mexican Dream Guadalajara

The Great Japanese Dream Tokyo

17

The Great Australian Dream

BACK TO BASICS

HAS BECOME THE GREAT UNIVERSAL DREAM

THE ROLE OF PLANNING:

People’s Route Æ Æ The Great Chinese Dream Hong Kong (Fairview Park)

Paris Suburbs

Planner’s Route Æ Æ

Not telling people how to live… Rather, helping people live as they prefer

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