Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-rcrh6 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-20T09:11:36.838Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Housing Crisis in Superstar Cities: Labour Markets, Price Inflation, and Financialization

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 July 2022

Francesco Findeisen*
Affiliation:
Center for European Studies and Comparative Politics (CEE), Sciences Po Paris [[email protected]].
Get access

Abstract

This article advances explanations of the housing crisis in modern political economies. It argues that the rise of agglomeration economies is driving the massive increase in housing prices in superstar cities. These concentrate high-paying jobs and life chances in central metropolitan areas, pulling in a highly skilled workforce who are willing and able to pay ‘whatever it takes’ for access to these opportunities. As a result, the value of homeownership in strategic urban locations has surged. Investors have thus found it rational to capitalize on longer-term price inflation and invest. Based on a comparison between New York City, London, Paris, and Berlin, this article demonstrates that housing prices in superstar cities move in lockstep with the reconfiguration of urban labour markets. Investors follow this trend in their decisions to invest in housing, which further compounds affordability pressures. The article concludes that access to homeownership in strategic urban locations increasingly mediates inequality and class formation in modern political economies.

Résumé

Résumé

Cet article propose des explications à la crise du logement, observée dans les économies politiques modernes. Il affirme que l’essor des économies d’agglomération est le moteur de l’inflation massive des prix du logement dans les villes dites « superstar ». Ces régions métropolitaines centrales, qui concentrent les emplois bien rémunérés et offrent les meilleures aménités urbaines, attirent une main d’œuvre hautement qualifiée, prête à payer le prix fort pour y vivre. En conséquence, la valeur des logements situés dans ces lieux stratégiques a significativement augmenté. Les investisseurs cherchent donc à tirer profit de cette augmentation des prix à long terme et à y investir. Basé sur une comparaison de New York, Londres, Paris et Berlin, cet article montre que les prix des logements dans les grandes villes évoluent en fonction de la reconfiguration des marchés du travail urbain. Les investisseurs suivent cette tendance dans leurs décisions d’investir dans le logement, ce qui aggrave la pression sur la capacité des ménages à accéder à la propriété. L’article conclut que l’accès à la propriété dans les lieux urbains stratégiques est un facteur clé pour expliquer les inégalités et la formation des classes sociales dans les économies politiques modernes.

Zusammenfassung

Zusammenfassung

Dieser Artikel trägt zu Erklärungen der Wohnungskrise in modernen Wirtschaftsordnungen bei. Er argumentiert, dass die Entwicklung von Agglomerationsökonomien die Wohnungspreisinflation in sogenannten ‚Superstarstädten‘ massiv antreibt. Letztere konzentrieren hochbezahlte Arbeitsplätze und Lebenschancen im Herzen strategischer Metropolregionen und ziehen hochqualifizierte Arbeitskräfte an, die bereit und in der Lage sind, für Wohnraum mit Zugang zu diesen Möglichkeiten das Nötige zu zahlen. Infolge dieser Dynamik steigt der Wert von Wohnimmobilien in zentralen Lagen stark an. Für Investoren wird es so rational, aus der längerfristigen Preisinflation Kapital zu schlagen und in städtischen Wohnraum zu investieren. Anhand eines Vergleichs von New York City, London, Paris und Berlin veranschaulicht dieser Artikel, dass sich Immobilienpreise in Superstarstädten im Gleichschritt mit der Neuordnung urbaner Arbeitsmärkte entwickeln. Investoren folgen diesem Trend bei ihren Investitionsentscheidungen, was den Druck auf die Bezahlbarkeit von Wohnraum weiter erhöht. Der Artikel kommt zu dem Schluss, dass der Zugang zu Wohneigentum in strategischen städtischen Lagen zunehmend zu Ungleichheit und Klassenbildung in modernen Wirtschaftssystemen beiträgt.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© European Journal of Sociology 2022

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

Footnotes

This article gratefully acknowledges funding support from the Agence Nationale de la Recherche (ANR) for the ORA project ‘What Is Governed in Cities: Residential Investment Landscapes and the Governance and Regulation of Housing Production’ (WHIG), which is based at Sciences Po’s Centre for European Studies and Comparative Politics (CEE).

I am deeply thankful to Patrick Le Galès for his encouragement, inspiration, and support. I benefitted immensely from the comments and suggestions made by Antoine Guironnet. I am grateful for the collaborative spirit of Sciences Po’s WHIG team and their comments on an earlier version of this article, which has since been significantly revised. I also thankfully acknowledge the extraordinarily helpful comments made by the two anonymous reviewers.

References

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Aalbers, Manuel, 2008. “The Financialization of Home and the Mortgage Market Crisis,” Competition & Change, 12 (2): 148166.Google Scholar
Aalbers, Manuel, 2016. Financialization of Housing: A Political Economy Approach (New York, Routledge).Google Scholar
Aalbers, Manuel, Hochstenbach, Cody, Bosma, Jelke and Fernandez, Rodrigo, 2020. “The Death and Life of Private Landlordism: How Financialized Homeownership Gave Birth to the Buy-To-Let Market,” Housing, Theory and Society, 38 (5): 541563.Google Scholar
Adkins, Lisa, Cooper, Melinda and Konings, Martijn, 2021. “Class in the 21st Century: Asset Inflation and the New Logic of Inequality,” Environment and Planning A: Economy and Space, 53 (3): 548572.Google Scholar
Aguilar-Retureta, José, 2016. “Regional Income Distribution in Mexico: New Long-Term Evidence, 1895-2010,” Economic History of Developing Regions, 31 (2-3): 225252.10.1080/20780389.2016.1175298CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ansell, Ben, 2014. “The Political Economy of Ownership: Housing Markets and the Welfare State,” American Political Science Review, 108 (2): 383402.Google Scholar
Ansell, Ben, 2019. “The Politics of Housing,” Annual Review of Political Science, 22: 165185.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Apur (Atelier parisien d’urbanisme), 2001. Principales Évolutions De L’Emploi Salarié À Paris [https://www.apur.org/fr/nos-travaux/principales-evolutions-emploi-salarie-paris-partir-resultats-6eme-enquete-regionale#, accessed January 17, 2021].Google Scholar
Atkinson, Rowland, Burrows, Roger and Rhodes, David, 2016. “Capital City? London’s Housing Markets and the ‘Super-Rich,’in Hay, I. and Beaverstock, J. V., eds, Handbook on Wealth and the Super-Rich (Cheltenham, Edward Elgar: 225243).10.4337/9781783474042.00019CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Autor, David, 2019. “Work of the Past, Work of the Future,” AEA Papers and Proceedings, 109: 132.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Badarinza, Cristian and Ramadorai, Tarun, 2018. “Home Away from Home? Foreign Demand and London House Prices,” Journal of Financial Economics, 130 (3): 532555.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Belotti, Emanuele and Arbaci, Sonia, 2020. “From Right to Good, and to Asset: The State-Led Financialisation of the Social Rented Housing in Italy,” Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space, 39 (2):414433.Google Scholar
Beswick, Joe and Penny, Joe, 2018. “Demolishing the Present to Sell off the Future? The Emergence of ‘Financialized Municipal Entrepreneurialism’ in London,” International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 42 (4): 612632.Google Scholar
Beswick, Joe, Alexandri, Georgia, Byrne, Michael, Vives-Miró, Sònia, Fields, Desiree, Hodkinson, Stuart and Janoschka, Michael, 2016. “Speculating on London’s Housing Future: The Rise of Global Corporate Landlords in ‘Post-Crisis’ Urban Landscapes,” City, 20 (2): 321341.Google Scholar
Blackwell, Timothy and Kohl, Sebastian, 2018. “The Origins of National Housing Finance Systems: A Comparative Investigation into Historical Variations in Mortgage Finance Regimes,” Review of International Political Economy, 25 (1): 4974.Google Scholar
Blackwell, Timothy and Kohl, Sebastian, 2019. “Historicizing Housing Typologies: Beyond Welfare State Regimes and Varieties of Residential Capitalism,” Housing Studies, 34 (2): 298318.Google Scholar
Bohle, Dorothee and Seabrooke, Leonard, 2020. “From Asset to Patrimony: The Re-Emergence of the Housing Question,” West European Politics, 43 (2): 412434.10.1080/01402382.2019.1663630CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Braun, Benjamin, Gabor, Daniela and Hübner, Marina, 2018. “Governing through Financial Markets: Towards a Critical Political Economy of Capital Markets Union,” Competition & Change, 22 (2): 101116.Google Scholar
Brill, Frances and Durrant, Daniel, 2021. “The Emergence of a Build to Rent Model: The Role of Narratives and Discourses,” Environment and Planning A: Economy and Space, 53 (5): 11401157.Google Scholar
Byrne, Michael, 2020. “Generation Rent and the Financialization of Housing: A Comparative Exploration of the Growth of the Private Rental Sector in Ireland, the UK and Spain,” Housing Studies, 35 (4): 743765.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Calhoun, Craig, 2011. “From the Current Crisis to Possible Futures,” in Calhoun, C and Derluguian, G., eds, Business as Usual. The Roots of the Global Financial Meltdown (New York, New York University Press: 942)Google Scholar
Christophers, Brett, 2021. “A Tale of Two Inequalities: Housing-Wealth Inequality and Tenure Inequality,” Environment and Planning A: Economy and Space, 53 (3): 573594.Google Scholar
Clark, Gordon, Dixon, Adam and Monk, Ashby, 2013. “Sovereign Wealth Funds. Legitimacy, Governance, and Global Power” (Princeton, Princeton University Press).Google Scholar
Crouch, Colin, 2009. “Privatised Keynesianism: An Unacknowledged Policy Regime,” The British Journal of Politics and International Relations, 11: 382399.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Deruytter, Laura and Möller, Sebastian, 2020. “Cultures of Debt Management Enter City Hall,” in Mader, P., Mertens, D. and van der Zwan, N., eds, The Routledge International Handbook of Financialization (London, Routledge: 400410).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Destatis (Statistisches Bundesamt), 2021. Verdienste Und Arbeitskosten, Arbeitnehmerverdienste, Lange Reihen [https://www.destatis.de/DE/Service/Bibliothek/_publikationen-fachserienliste-16.html, accessed June 17, 2021].Google Scholar
Emf (European Mortgage Foundation), 2020. HYPOSTAT 2020. A Review of Europe’s Mortgage and Housing Markets [https://hypo.org/app/uploads/sites/3/2020/11/HYPOSTAT-2020-FINAL.pdf, accessed August 20, 2021].Google Scholar
Endrejat, Vanessa and Thiemann, Matthias, 2020. “When Brussels meets shadow banking – Technical complexity, regulatory agency and the reconstruction of the shadow banking chain,” Competition & Change, 24(3-4):225247.Google Scholar
Engelen, Ewald, Ertürk, Ismail, Froud, Julie, Johal, Sukhdev, Leaver, Adam, Moran, Michael, Nilsson, Adriana and Williams, Karel, 2011. After the Great Complacence . Financial Crisis and the Politics of Reform (Oxford, Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Engelen, Ewald and Glasmacher, Anna, 2018. “The Waiting Game: How Securitization Became the Solution for the Growth Problem of the Eurozone,” Competition & Change, 22 (2): 165183.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Epstein, Gerald, 2005. “Introduction: Financialization and the World Economy,” in Epstein, G, eds, Financialization and the World Economy (Cheltham, Edward Elgar: 316).Google Scholar
Fernandez, Rodrigo and Aalbers, Manuel, 2016. “Financialization and Housing: Between Globalization and Varieties of Capitalism,” Competition & Change, 20 (2): 7188.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fields, Desiree, 2015. “Contesting the Financialization of Urban Space: Community Organizations and the Struggle to Preserve Affordable Rental Housing in New York City,” Journal of Urban Affairs, 37 (2): 144165.Google Scholar
Fields, Desiree, 2018. “Constructing a New Asset Class: Property-Led Financial Accumulation after the Crisis,” Economic Geography, 94 (2): 118140.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fields, Desiree and Uffer, Sabina, 2016. “The Financialisation of Rental Housing: A Comparative Analysis of New York City and Berlin,” Urban Studies, 53 (7): 14861502.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fuller, Gregory, 2015. “Who’s Borrowing? Credit Encouragement vs. Credit Mitigation in National Financial Systems,” Politics & Society, 43 (2): 241268.Google Scholar
Fuller, Gregory, Johnston, Alison and Regan, Aidan, 2020. “Housing Prices and Wealth Inequality in Western Europe,” West European Politics, 43 (2): 297320.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
García-Lamarca, Melissa, 2020. “Real Estate Crisis Resolution Regimes and Residential REITs: Emerging Socio-Spatial Impacts in Barcelona,” Housing Studies, 36 (9): 14071426.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Glaeser, Edward, 2008. Cities, Agglomeration and Spatial Equilibrium (Oxford, Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Glaeser, Edward, 2010. “Housing Policy in the Wake of the Crash,” Daedalus, 139 (4): 95106.Google Scholar
Glaeser, Edward and Gyourko, Joseph, 2018. “The Economic Implications of Housing Supply,” Journal of Economic Perspectives, 32 (1): 330.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Glucksberg, Luna and Burrows, Roger, 2016. “Family Offices and the Contemporary Infrastructures of Dynastic Wealth,” Sociologica, 10 (2): 122.Google Scholar
Goldstein, Adam and Tian, Ziyao, 2020. “Financialization and Income Generation in the 21st Century: Rise of the Petit Rentier Class,” Socio-Economic Review: 129.Google Scholar
Gotham, Kevin Fox, 2009. “Creating Liquidity out of Spatial Fixity: The Secondary Circuit of Capital and the Subprime Mortgage Crisis,” International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 33 (2): 355371.Google Scholar
Guironnet, Antoine, Attuyer, Katia and Halbert, Ludovic, 2016. “Building Cities on Financial Assets: The Financialisation of Property Markets and Its Implications for City Governments in the Paris City-Region,” Urban Studies, 53 (7): 14421464.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gyourko, Joseph, Mayer, Christopher and Sinai, Todd, 2013. “Superstar Cities,” American Economic Journal: Economic Policy, 5 (4): 167199.Google Scholar
Halbert, Ludovic and Attuyer, Katia, 2016. “Introduction: The Financialisation of Urban Production: Conditions, Mediations and Transformations,” Urban Studies, 53 (7): 13471361.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Harrington, Brook, 2016. Capital without borders: wealth managers and the one percent (Cambridge, MA, Harvard University Press).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Helgadóttir, Oddný, 2016. “Banking Upside down: The Implicit Politics of Shadow Banking Expertise,” Review of International Political Economy, 23 (6): 915940.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hilber, Christian and Mense, Andreas, 2021. “Why Have House Prices Risen so Much More than Rents in Superstar Cities,” Center for Economic Performance Discussion Paper, 1743 (London, London School of Economics and Political Science).Google Scholar
Hilber, Christian and Vermeulen, Wouter, 2016. “The Impact of Supply Constraints on House Prices in England,” The Economic Journal, 126 (591): 358405.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hsbc (Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation Limited), 2017. Global Real Estate. Trends in the World’s Largest Asset Class [https://internationalservices.hsbc.com/content/dam/hsbcis/pdf/HSBC_Global_Real_Estate_Report_July2017.pdf, accessed June 17, 2020].Google Scholar
Hsieh, Chang-Tai and Moretti, Enrico, 2019. “Housing Constraints and Spatial Misallocation,” American Economic Journal: Macroeconomics, 11 (2): 139.Google Scholar
Ibb (Investitionsbank Berlin), 2003. IBB Wohnungsmarktbericht 2003 [https://www.ibb.de/media/dokumente/publikationen/berliner-wohnungsmarkt/wohnungsmarktbericht/ibb_wohnungsmarktbericht_2003.pdf., accessed May 12, 2021].Google Scholar
Insee (Institut national de la statistique et des études économiques), 2021a. Indices notaires-Insee des prix des logements anciens - Premier trimestre 2021 [http://www.epsilon.insee.fr:80/jspui/handle/1/145147, accessed May 12, 2021].Google Scholar
Insee (Institut national de la statistique et des études économiques), 2021b. Produit intérieur brut en 2020 : comparaisons régionales [https://www.insee.fr/fr/statistiques/fichier/2012723/TCR_062.xlsx, accessed May 30, 2021].Google Scholar
Insee (Institut national de la statistique et des études économiques), 2021c. T201 – Emploi en fin d’année par département et région de France (hors Mayotte), selon le statut (salarié/non salarié) et le secteur d’activité (A5) [https://www.insee.fr/fr/statistiques/fichier/3202697/T201.xls, accessed May 30, 2021].Google Scholar
Insee (Institut national de la statistique et des études économiques), 2021d. T402 - Salaire brut annuel, par secteur d’activité, région et département 2018 [https://www.insee.fr/fr/statistiques/fichier/2122668/dads2008_T402.xls, accessed May 30, 2021].Google Scholar
Kemeny, Tom and Storper, Michael. 2020. “Superstar Cities and Left-Behind Places: Disruptive Innovation, Labor Demand, and Interregional Inequality,” International Inequalities Institute Working Paper, 41 (London, London School of Economics and Political Science).Google Scholar
Kholodilin, Konstantin and Kohl, Sebastian, 2021. “Rent Price Control – Yet Another Great Equalizer of Economic Inequalities? Evidence from a Century of Historical Data,” Discussion Paper, 1727 (Berlin, Deutsches Institut Für Wirtschaftsforschung).Google Scholar
Kohl, Sebastian, 2020. “Too Much Mortgage Debt? The Effect of Housing Financialization on Housing Supply and Residential Capital Formation,” Socio-Economic Review, 19 (2): 413440.Google Scholar
Krippner, Greta, 2011. Capitalizing on Crisis: The Political Origins of the Rise of Finance (Cambridge, MA, Harvard University Press).Google Scholar
Lagna, Andrea, 2015. “Italian Municipalities and the Politics of Financial Derivatives: Rethinking the Foucauldian Perspective,” Competition & Change, 19 (4): 283300.Google Scholar
Larsen, Henrik Gutzon and Lund Hansen, Anders, 2015. “Commodifying Danish Housing Commons,” Geografiska Annaler: Series B, Human Geography, 97 (3): 263274.Google Scholar
Lowe, Richard (IPE Real Assets), 2020. Top 100 Real Estate Investors 2020 [https://realassets.ipe.com/top-100-real-estate-investors/top-100-real-estate-investors-2020/10045390.article, accessed September 17, 2021].Google Scholar
Mckenzie, Rex and Atkinson, Rowland, 2020. “Anchoring Capital in Place: The Grounded Impact of International Wealth Chains on Housing Markets in London,” Urban Studies, 57 (1): 2139.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nappi-Choulet, Ingrid, 2013. “La financiarisation du marché immobilier français : de la crise des années 1990 à la crise des subprimes de 2008,” Revue d’Économie Financière, 110: 189205.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nethercote, Megan, 2020. “Build-to-Rent and the Financialization of Rental Housing: Future Research Directions,” Housing Studies, 35 (5): 839874.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ny Dol (New York State Department of Labor), 2019. New York City. Significant Industries. A Report to the Workforce Development System [https://www.jobs.ny.gov/stats/PDFs/Significant-Industries-New-York-City.pdf, accessed June 18, 2021].Google Scholar
Ny Dol (New York State Department of Labor), 2021. New York City Employment Statistics [https://dol.ny.gov/statistics-new-york-city-employment-statistics, accessed June 18, 2021].Google Scholar
Nyc Planning (New York City Department of City Planning), 2000. NYC 2000 Results from the 2000 Census [https://www1.nyc.gov/assets/planning/download/pdf/planning-level/nyc-population/census2000/nyc20002.pdf, accessed June 18, 2021].Google Scholar
Oecd (Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development), 2019. Annual Survey of Large Pension Funds and Public Pension Reserve Funds 2019 [www.oecd.org/finance/survey-large-pension-funds.htm, accessed June 01, 2020].Google Scholar
Ons (Office of National Statistics), 1997. Earnings and Hours Worked, UK Region by Industry by Two-Digit SIC: ASHE Table [https://www.ons.gov.uk/file?uri=/employmentandlabourmarket/peopleinwork/earningsandworkinghours/datasets/regionbyindustry2digitsicashetable5/1997/1997-table-5.zip, accessed June 18, 2020].Google Scholar
Ons (Office of National Statistics), 2010. Earnings and hours worked, region by occupation by two-digit SIC: ASHE Table 3 [https://www.ons.gov.uk/file?uri=%2femploymentandlabourmarket%2fpeopleinwork%2fearningsandworkinghours%2fdatasets%2fregionbyoccupation2digitsocashetable3%2f2010revised/2010-revised-table-3.zip, accessed June 18, 2020].Google Scholar
Ons (Office of National Statistics), 2019. Earnings and Hours Worked, UK Region by Industry by Two-Digit SIC: ASHE Table 5 [https://www.ons.gov.uk/file?uri=%2femploymentandlabourmarket%2fpeopleinwork%2fearningsandworkinghours%2fdatasets%2fregionbyindustry2digitsicashetable5%2f2019revised/sic2007table52019revised.zip, accessed June 18, 2020].Google Scholar
Ons (Office of National Statistics), 2021a. Business Register and Employment Survey, Table 5 Workforce Jobs by Region and Industry, Seasonally Adjusted [https://www.ons.gov.uk/file?uri=/employmentandlabourmarket/peopleinwork/employmentandemployeetypes/datasets/workforcejobsbyregionandindustryjobs05/current/jobs05jun2021.xls, accessed June 18, 2021].Google Scholar
Ons (Office of National Statistics), 2021b. Ratio of House Price to Residence-Based Earnings (Lower Quartile and Median), 2002 to 2020 [https://www.ons.gov.uk/peoplepopulationandcommunity/housing/datasets/ratioofhousepricetoresidencebasedearningslowerquartileandmedian, accessed June 18, 2021].Google Scholar
Ons (Office of National Statistics), 2021c. Regional Gross Domestic Product: City Regions, 1998-2019 [https://www.ons.gov.uk/economy/grossdomesticproductgdp/datasets/regionalgrossdomesticproductcityregions, accessed June 12, 2021].Google Scholar
Pacewicz, Josh, 2013. “Tax Increment Financing, Economic Development Professionals and the Financialization of Urban Politics,” Socio-Economic Review, 11 (3): 413440.Google Scholar
Piketty, Thomas, 2014. Capital in the Twenty-First Century (Cambridge, MA, Harvard University Press).Google ScholarPubMed
Pns (Paris Notaires Services), 2021. Historique Des Prix Au M2 standardisés des appartements anciens à Paris par arrondissement [https://basebien.com/PNSPublic/DocPublic/HistoriquedesprixaumappartementsanciensParispararrdt.pdf, accessed June 12, 2021].Google Scholar
Pozsar, Zoltan and Singh, Manmohan, 2011. “The Nonbank-Bank Nexus and the Shadow Banking System,” Working Paper, 11 (289) (Washington DC, International Monetary Fund).Google Scholar
Quinn, Sarah, 2017. “‘The Miracles of Bookkeeping’: How Budget Politics Link Fiscal Policies and Financial Markets,” American Journal of Sociology, 123 (1): 4885.Google Scholar
Real Estate and Hodes Weill & Associates, 2019. “2018 Institutional Real Estate Allocations Monitor, Survey Highlights,” Cornell Real Estate Review, 17: 5055.Google Scholar
Reeves, Aaron, Friedman, Sam, Rahal, Charles and Flemmen, Magne, 2017. “The Decline and Persistence of the Old Boy: Private Schools and Elite Recruitment 1897 to 2016,” American Sociological Review, 82 (6): 11391166.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rodríguez-Pose, Andrés and Storper, Michael, 2020. “Housing, Urban Growth and Inequalities: The Limits to Deregulation and Upzoning in Reducing Economic and Spatial Inequality,” Urban Studies, 57 (2): 223248.Google Scholar
Ronald, Richard and Kadi, Justin, 2018. “The Revival of Private Landlords in Britain’s Post-Homeownership Society,” New Political Economy, 23 (6): 786803.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rosés, Joan and Wolf, Nikolas, 2018. “Regional Economic Development in Europe, 1900-2010: A Description of the Patterns,” Discussion Paper, 12749 (London, Center for Economic Policy Research).Google Scholar
Sanfelici, Daniel and Halbert, Ludovic, 2019. “Financial Market Actors as Urban Policy-Makers: The Case of Real Estate Investment Trusts in Brazil,” Urban Geography, 40 (1): 83103.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sbb (Amt für Statistik Berlin Brandenburg), 2021a. Bruttoinlandsprodukt Und Bruttowertschöpfung Im Land Berlin Und Im Land Brandenburg Nach Wirtschaftsbereichen , 1991 Bis 2020, Jährlich [https://download.statistik-berlin-brandenburg.de/333852a19fcdee51/a48bfd1b81ac/SB_P01-01-00_2020j01_BE.xlsx, accessed June 18, 2021].Google Scholar
Sbb (Amt für Statistik Berlin Brandenburg), 2021b. Bruttomonatsverdienst Vollzeitbeschäftigter Arbeitnehmender Im Produzierenden Gewerbe Und Dienstleistungsbereich 2020 [https://download.statistik-berlin-brandenburg.de/f2f87fd7ba6123dd/d71828cedca5/verdienste-lange-reihen-2020.xlsx, accessed June 18, 2021].Google Scholar
Sbb (Amt für Statistik Berlin Brandenburg), 2021c. Erwerbstätige Am Arbeitsort Berlin [https://download.statistik-berlin-brandenburg.de/67e202aeebfe7322/763053a6c25a/erwerbstaetigkeit-langereihe-1991-2019-erwerbstaetige.xlsx, accessed June 18, 2021].Google Scholar
Sbb (Amt für Statistik Berlin Brandenburg), 2021d. Statistischer Bericht N 14-j/20. Vierteljährliche Verdiensterhebung in Berlin Jahr 2020 [https://download.statistik-berlin-brandenburg.de/503b98aa35108b5d/228683d05904/SB_N01-04-00_2020j01_BE.xlsx., accessed June 18, 2021].Google Scholar
Schwartz, Alex, 2014. Housing Policy in the United States (New York, Routledge).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schwartz, Herman and Seabrooke, Leonard, 2009. The Politics of Housing Booms and Busts (London, Palgrave Macmillan).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Scott, Allen, 2002. Global City-Regions: Trends, Theory, Policy (Oxford, Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
Scott, Allen and Storper, Michael, 2015. “The Nature of Cities: The Scope and Limits of Urban Theory,” International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 39 (1): 115.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Storper, Michael, 2013. Keys to the City: How Economics, Institutions, Social Interaction, and Politics Shape Development (Princeton, Princeton University Press).Google Scholar
Streeck, Wolfgang, 2014. Buying Time. The Delayed Crisis of Democratic Capitalism (London and New York, Verso).Google Scholar
Streeck, Wolfgang, 2015. “The Rise of the European Consolidation State,” in Hideko, M., eds, Policy Change Under New Democratic Capitalism (London, Routledge: 2746).Google Scholar
Teresa, Benjamin, 2016. “Managing Fictitious Capital: The Legal Geography of Investment and Political Struggle in Rental Housing in New York City,” Environment and Planning A: Economy and Space, 48 (3): 465484.Google Scholar
Thiemann, Matthias, 2018. The Growth of Shadow Banking”: A Comparative Institutional Analysis (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Torrance, Morag, 2008. “Forging Glocal Governance? Urban Infrastructures as Networked Financial Products: Urban Infrastructures as Networked Financial Products,” International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 32 (1): 121.Google Scholar
Uffer, Sabina, 2014. “Wohnungsprivatisierung in Berlin. Eine Analyse Verschiedener Investitionsstrategien Und Deren Konsequenzen Für Die Stadt Und Ihre Bewohner,” in Holm, A., eds, Reclaim Berlin. Sozial Kämpfe in der neoliberalen Stadt (Berlin, Reclam: 64-82).Google Scholar
Us Bls (U.S. Department of Labor), 2011. New York City’s ‘Pay Premium’ from 1990 to 2009 [https://www.bls.gov/opub/ted/2011/ted_20111108_data.htm, accessed June 18, 2021].Google Scholar
Us Census (US Census Bureau), 2019a. QuickFacts: New York County [https://www.census.gov/quickfacts/fact/table/newyorkcitynewyork/HSG010219.Google Scholar
Us Census (US Census Bureau), 2019b. “QuickFacts: United States” [https://www.census.gov/quickfacts/fact/table/US/VET605219, accessed June 12, 2021].Google Scholar
Verdun, Amy, 2015. “A Historical Institutionalist Explanation of the EU’s Responses to the Euro Area Financial Crisis,” Journal of European Public Policy, 22 (2): 219237.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Vidal, Lorenzo, 2019. “Securing Social Gains in, Against and Beyond the State: The Case of Denmark’s ‘Common Housing’,” Housing, Theory and Society, 36 (4): 448468.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wainwright, Thomas and Manville, Graham, 2017. “Financialization and the Third Sector: Innovation in Social Housing Bond Markets,” Environment and Planning A, 49 (4): 819838.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Waldron, Richard, 2018. “Capitalizing on the State: The Political Economy of Real Estate Investment Trusts and the ‘Resolution’ of the Crisis,” Geoforum, 90: 206218.Google Scholar
Weber, Rachel, 2010. “Selling City Futures: The Financialization of Urban Redevelopment Policy,” Economic Geography, 86 (3): 251274.Google Scholar
Wijburg, Gertjan and Aalbers, Manuel, 2017. “The Alternative Financialization of the German Housing Market,” Housing Studies, 32 (7): 968989.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zwan, Natascha van der, 2014. “Making Sense of Financialization,” Socio-Economic Review, 12 (1): 99129.Google Scholar