Affiliation:
1. Nuffield College and Department of Politics and International Relations, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK
2. Department of Political Science, University of Washington, Seattle
Abstract
The enormous growth in house prices in Europe since the 1990s has led to increasing concerns about the affordability of housing for ordinary citizens. This article explores the relationship between housing affordability – house prices relative to incomes – and the demand for redistributive and housing policy, using data drawn from European and British social surveys and an analysis of British elections. It shows that, as unaffordability rises, citizens appear in aggregate to become less supportive of redistribution, interventionist housing policy and left-wing parties. However, this aggregate rise, driven by the predominance of homeowners in most European countries, masks a growing polarization in preferences between renters and owners in less affordable regions.
Subject
Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,General Social Sciences
Cited by
22 articles.
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