Bricks in the Wall

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Basel Iii
Bond Buying Programmes
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comparative political economy
comparative politics
coordinated market economies
Country Specific Slopes
Covered Bond Purchase Programme
CPE Literature
Dualist Rental Market
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Error Correction Model
Federal Reserve
financial regulation Europe
Financialised Housing Markets
generational housing inequality
Home Ownership Rates
Homeownership Rate
Housing Bonds
housing markets
housing policy impact on populism
Long Term Government Debt
Mortgage Credit Markets
mortgage credit policy
Mortgage Debt
Negative Relationship
Online Appendix
Pension Generosity
Pension Replacement Rates
Pension Spending
political preferences
Private Rental Sector
Qe Programme
Real Housing Price Growth
Significant Short Run Effect
Unitary Rental Markets
wealth distribution
welfare state reform
West European politics

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367743291
  • Weight: 460g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 25 Sep 2023
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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This volume provides a comprehensive analysis of how politics shape housing markets and vice-versa. It demonstrates how housing impacts a variety of social and political phenomenon including populist politics, generational divides, wealth inequality, monetary policy, and the welfare state.

Housing and housing markets have important implications for economic stability, public policy, domestic politics and wealth inequality in Europe and beyond. Yet despite its importance, housing has received relatively little attention in comparative politics scholarship. The contributions within this volume push the scholarship of housing into fresh, innovative directions. The chapters focus on housing’s contribution to wealth inequality, how housing constrains governments’ policy choices in welfare state reform and how it can strengthen governments’ hands in financial regulation. Other contributions reveal the impact of housing on central bankers’ motivations for implementing monetary expansion, highlight the generational divide in gaining access to home-ownership, demonstrate how housing-driven wealth inequality steers voters political preferences towards right-wing populism, and explain how housing gradually shifted from being a social right to an object of investment in Europe, even within its most egalitarian states. These contributions cover a diversity of cases in Western and Eastern Europe and theoretical paradigms that will appeal to scholars and policy makers alike.

The chapters in this book were originally published as a special issue of West European Politics.

Alison Johnston is associate professor and the U.G. Dubach Chair in Political Science in the School of Public Policy at Oregon State University, USA.

Paulette Kurzer is professor in the School of Government and Public Policy and Director of the M.A. in International Security Studies at the University of Arizona, USA.