Friday, January 24, 2020
On cross-country:
- OECD Affordable Housing Database – OECD
- 16th Annual Demographia International Housing Affordability Survey – Demographia
- The 11 most expensive cities to live in around the world in 2020 – Insider
- Prerequisites to getting Africa’s urbanization ‘right’ – Brookings
On the US:
- The Outlook for Housing – Fed
- Housing Supply Chartbook – Urban Institute
- Slight Gains in 2020 Outlook for Residential Remodeling – Harvard Joint Center for Housing Studies
- Why Manhattan’s Skyscrapers Are Empty – The Atlantic
- How the trade war impacts regional economies and housing markets – Builder
- The slowdown in the US housing market – Central Bank of Spain
- Who’s to blame for high housing costs? It’s more complicated than you think. – Brookings
- Planet Money: Single Women Are Shortchanged In The Housing Market – NPR
- What’s Ahead for the U.S. Housing Market in 2020? – Wharton Business Daily
- Are Housing Markets Still Clearing out the Trash of the Last Bust? – Mises Institute
- Opinion: How unfair mortgage and housing practices affect you and your neighborhood — and what can be done about it – Market Watch
- She Almost Lost Her Home In California’s Wildfires. Instead She Built A $200 Million Business. – Forbes
- Changing supply elasticities and regional housing booms – Bank of England
- Institutional Investors’ Impact on the Housing Market – Urban Institute
- Here’s How Many New Homes It Would Take To Fix The Housing Shortage – Forbes
- Eight ways travelers can fight ‘the Airbnb effect’ on local housing costs – Washington Post
On other countries:
- [China] Magnification of the “China Shock” Through the U.S. Housing Market – VoxChina
- [Hong Kong] Pressure building on rental market amid continued stress – RICS
- [United Arab Emirates] UAE’s housing market remains gloomy – Global Property Guide
- [United Kingdom] Housing equity used to fund home improvements, not future care needs – Financial Times
- [United Kingdom] Evidence and the persistence of mistaken ideas: the case of house prices – mainly macro
Posted by Prakash Loungani at 5:00 AM
Labels: Global Housing Watch