Average rating: | Rated 4.5 of 5. |
Level of importance: | Rated 4 of 5. |
Level of validity: | Rated 4 of 5. |
Level of completeness: | Rated 4 of 5. |
Level of comprehensibility: | Rated 5 of 5. |
Competing interests: | None |
This paper argues that the housing affordability and wealth inequality crises in advanced economies are driven by a feedback cycle between finance and landed property. This cycle has emerged due to the policy preference for private home ownership and the liberalization of bank credit, which has made the landed property the most attractive form of collateral for the banking system and the most desirable form of financial asset for households and investors. The paper suggests that demand-side reforms, including structural and institutional reforms to banking systems and land policy reforms aimed at reducing rent extraction and speculative profits, are required to break this cycle.