The median price of a single-family home in Houston dropped 8.5 percent compared to January 2008, according to the Houston Association of Realtors. But Houstonians are still much better off than many other major cities. The S&P/Case-Shiller home-price index finds prices in Phoenix have fallen 34 percent over the last year, 33 percent in Las Vegas, and 31 percent in San Francisco.
A new Reason Foundation policy brief finds that Houston’s housing market adapts to changing economic conditions better than the housing markets in other major cities, in part because it is the only major U.S. city without zoning regulations. The brief says this allows the region to maximize flexibility and accommodate housing diversity.
The report says the region’s lack of zoning policies and wide range of land use options helped it when the housing bubble began to burst. For example, between 2005 and 2007, the number of average monthly residential permits issued in Houston fell by 17.7 percent, which was less than half of the decline seen in Dallas-Fort Worth (44 percent) and San Antonio (35.9 percent).
“Houston’s largely free-market approach to land development has been widely criticized by the planning profession,” said Sam Staley, the report’s author and director of urban growth and land use policy at Reason Foundation. “An analysis of residential market trends, however, finds that Houston’s housing market has been more resilient and robust than other cities in Texas, even in the face of what is widely considered an unprecedented housing downturn. Moreover, this resilience is particularly notable for multifamily housing, a residential sector most cities struggle to nurture and accommodate.”
Reason Foundation
Search Reason
Housing Market Resilience and Affordability in Houston, Texas
Houston's housing market has been more resilient than other Texas cities
This Study's Materials
- Housing Market Resilience and Affordability in Houston, Texas, PDF, 344.9 KB
Samuel Staley
Latest From Reason
-
Corporatism Is Not the Free Market
The U.S. ceased to be a free market a long time ago.
(2/3)
-
Obama's Next Bailout
Home flippers get a sweetheart deal from the government.
(2/3)
-
FDR, The New Deal, and The Expansion of Federal Power
(2/3)
-
It?s Enough to Literally Make Your Head Explode
All patriotic Americans ought to stand up and say enough is enough. We need a law to put a stop to this literally-abuse.
(2/3)
-
Why the Super Bowl (and Other Sports) Shouldn't Become Political Footballs
Or, as a teenage, mostly non-practicing heterosexual libertarian regularly accused of being gay and communist simply for playing soccer, I am annoyed when some dumb game is larded up with ideological meaning.
(2/3)
-
Romney Most Electable Candidate, Yet Gingrich in Statistical Tie Among GOP Voters
(1/31)
-
Explaining Newt?s Second Surge
Why is the disgraced former House speaker winning Republican votes?
(1/26)
-
George Washington Would Beat Out Romney as Richest President; John Kerry Would Have, Too
(1/25)
Anthony Randazzo Discusses Warren Buffett, Taxes and SOPA on Freedom Watch
On Freedom Watch, Julian Morris Discusses Breaking Up the Big Banks and Federal Power
Reason Events & Appearances
Reason Seminar Cruise 2012
Aug 11 - 18, 2012
Alaska



