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Estimation of Housing Needs Amidst Population Growth and Change

Author

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  • Dowell Myers
  • Donald Pitkin
  • Julie Park

Abstract

Housing needs is a concept of central importance to state and local planning in the United States (Landis and LeGates 2000). Roughly characterized as the number and type of housing units required to accommodate a population at a given standard of housing occupancy, the formulation of a quantified estimate of housing needs requires many assumptions that intertwine normative and empirical judgments. The overall aim of this article is to propose a needed theoretical framework and more rigorous methods for demographic component of housing needs estimates. Grounding this in the recent California experience helps to illustrate concepts with a concrete example. As demographic change continues to spread across the country, growing numbers of regions and cities can benefit from this study of the California experience. The article begins with a broad overview of the definition of housing needs, and then focuses on the central role of population growth and change in determining future construction needs. A pivotal issue is the instability over time of the empirical relationship between population and housing, as shown by comparison of household formation and homeownership rates from 1960 to 2000. A further issue is the sharp differences registered between different age groups, races, ethnicities, and nativity groups. Although disaggregation permits projections to capitalize on observed differences between groups, it also highlights the existence of inequities and the policy goal of reducing them.

Suggested Citation

  • Dowell Myers & Donald Pitkin & Julie Park, 2002. "Estimation of Housing Needs Amidst Population Growth and Change," Working Paper 8626, USC Lusk Center for Real Estate.
  • Handle: RePEc:luk:wpaper:8626
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    File URL: http://lusk.usc.edu/sites/default/files/working_papers/wp_2002-3.pdf
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    References listed on IDEAS

    as
    1. Pitkin, John R. & Myers, Dowell, 1994. "The Specification of Demographic Effects on Housing Demand: Avoiding the Age-Cohort Fallacy," Journal of Housing Economics, Elsevier, vol. 3(3), pages 240-250, September.
    2. Green, Richard K. & White, Michelle J., 1997. "Measuring the Benefits of Homeowning: Effects on Children," Journal of Urban Economics, Elsevier, vol. 41(3), pages 441-461, May.
    3. Dowell Myers & Seong Lee, 1996. "Immigration cohorts and residential overcrowding in southern California," Demography, Springer;Population Association of America (PAA), vol. 33(1), pages 51-65, February.
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    1. Nachatter Singh Garha & Alda Botelho Azevedo, 2021. "Population and Housing (Mis)match in Lisbon, 1981–2018. A Challenge for an Aging Society," Social Sciences, MDPI, vol. 10(3), pages 1-18, March.

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