How land use regulations are zoning out low-income families

The downtown Los Angeles skyline is seen behind new apartment buildings in Little Tokyo, in Los Angeles, California, United States, April 14, 2016. /REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson - RTX2A0L5
The downtown Los Angeles skyline is seen behind new apartment buildings in Little Tokyo, in Los Angeles, California, United States, April 14, 2016. /REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson – RTX2A0L5

By Richard V. Reeves and Dimitrios | The Brookings Institution

Social mobility and geographical mobility have historically gone hand-in-hand in America: people move to places with greater opportunity. But such moves have become steadily more difficult, in part because of the growing regulation of land use. Zoning ordinances that limit density are a particular problem, reducing the availability of affordable housing.

The number of court cases mentioning “land use” (an innovative measure of regulation used in a Hutchins Center working paper by Peter Ganong and Daniel Shoag) has risen steadily:

Continued:

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