Prudential measures in housing access: Should one include transport costs in the front-end ratio?

A widespread prudential measure limits the housing expense ratio—defined as the share of income spent on the rent or loan payment—to ensure household solvency. This policy is increasingly criticized, however, as it would induce households to settle far from the city center in search of lower housing...

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Main Author: Nicolas Coulombel
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Minnesota 2017-06-01
Series:Journal of Transport and Land Use
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.jtlu.org/index.php/jtlu/article/view/849
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spelling doaj-100c91a1dea9404ebe0ee50c2e43d5ea2021-08-31T04:37:40ZengUniversity of MinnesotaJournal of Transport and Land Use1938-78492017-06-0110110.5198/jtlu.2017.849265Prudential measures in housing access: Should one include transport costs in the front-end ratio?Nicolas Coulombel0LVMTA widespread prudential measure limits the housing expense ratio—defined as the share of income spent on the rent or loan payment—to ensure household solvency. This policy is increasingly criticized, however, as it would induce households to settle far from the city center in search of lower housing prices, fostering urban sprawl. It would even prove counterproductive as high transport costs in distant areas would more than offset the lower housing costs. To avoid these unintended effects, several researchers advocate limiting the joint housing plus transport expense ratio instead. This paper aims to shed light on this issue by comparing the two prudential measures—limiting either the housing or the housing plus transport expense ratio—using the monocentric model. By constraining residential choices and reducing housing consumption, both policies improve household solvency and reduce urban sprawl. While this seems to contradict previous claims, the joint constraint proves more efficient in both regards. Provided the constraint is not too stringent, both policies have limited impact on household welfare and often even improve welfare. But this time, capping only the housing expense ratio always dominates the joint housing plus transport constraint. A numerical application to the Paris region illustrates our findings for a real case study. Results suggest that replacing the current limitation of the housing expense ratio with a joint housing plus transport constraint would significantly improve household solvency and curb urban sprawl, with a negligible welfare loss.https://www.jtlu.org/index.php/jtlu/article/view/849housing budgettransport budgetprudential measuresmonocentric model
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nicolas Coulombel
spellingShingle Nicolas Coulombel
Prudential measures in housing access: Should one include transport costs in the front-end ratio?
Journal of Transport and Land Use
housing budget
transport budget
prudential measures
monocentric model
author_facet Nicolas Coulombel
author_sort Nicolas Coulombel
title Prudential measures in housing access: Should one include transport costs in the front-end ratio?
title_short Prudential measures in housing access: Should one include transport costs in the front-end ratio?
title_full Prudential measures in housing access: Should one include transport costs in the front-end ratio?
title_fullStr Prudential measures in housing access: Should one include transport costs in the front-end ratio?
title_full_unstemmed Prudential measures in housing access: Should one include transport costs in the front-end ratio?
title_sort prudential measures in housing access: should one include transport costs in the front-end ratio?
publisher University of Minnesota
series Journal of Transport and Land Use
issn 1938-7849
publishDate 2017-06-01
description A widespread prudential measure limits the housing expense ratio—defined as the share of income spent on the rent or loan payment—to ensure household solvency. This policy is increasingly criticized, however, as it would induce households to settle far from the city center in search of lower housing prices, fostering urban sprawl. It would even prove counterproductive as high transport costs in distant areas would more than offset the lower housing costs. To avoid these unintended effects, several researchers advocate limiting the joint housing plus transport expense ratio instead. This paper aims to shed light on this issue by comparing the two prudential measures—limiting either the housing or the housing plus transport expense ratio—using the monocentric model. By constraining residential choices and reducing housing consumption, both policies improve household solvency and reduce urban sprawl. While this seems to contradict previous claims, the joint constraint proves more efficient in both regards. Provided the constraint is not too stringent, both policies have limited impact on household welfare and often even improve welfare. But this time, capping only the housing expense ratio always dominates the joint housing plus transport constraint. A numerical application to the Paris region illustrates our findings for a real case study. Results suggest that replacing the current limitation of the housing expense ratio with a joint housing plus transport constraint would significantly improve household solvency and curb urban sprawl, with a negligible welfare loss.
topic housing budget
transport budget
prudential measures
monocentric model
url https://www.jtlu.org/index.php/jtlu/article/view/849
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