Abstract

Inclusionary housing (IH) is a regulatory instrument adopted by local governments in many countries to produce affordable housing by capturing resources created through the marketplace. In order to assess whether it is efficient, scholarly attention has been widely focused on its evaluation. However, there is a lack of studies evaluating IH from a governance perspective. Since IH is about involving private actors in affordable housing production, the governance point of view of cooperating governmental and non-governmental actors governing society to achieve societal goals is highly relevant. The two most important elements of governance—actors and interrelationships among these actors—are taken to build an analytical framework to explore and evaluate the governance of IH. Based on a research approach that combines a literature review and a case study of China, this paper concludes that the ineffective governance of Chinese IH is based on three challenges: (1) The distribution of costs and benefits across actors is unequal since private developers bear the cost, but do not enjoy the increments of land value; (2) there is no sufficient compensation for developers to offset the cost; and (3) there is no room for negotiations for flexibility in a declining market. Given that IH is favored in many Chinese cities, this paper offers the policy implications: local governments should bear more costs of IH, rethink their relations with developers, provide flexible compliance options for developers, and perform differently in a flourishing housing market and a declining housing market.

Highlights

  • The central government has been under severe pressure to provide affordable homes, especially in the form of Public Rental Housing (PRH) [84]

  • Inclusionary housing (IH) is an instrument utilized by local governments to require or encourage real estate developers to include affordable housing units in otherwise market or commercial projects

  • With an indirect cost to the public sector and the provision of housing for a combination of different income groups, IH has been favored by many local governments in the world since its first adoption in the US in the 1970s

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Summary

Introduction

Inclusionary housing (abbreviated hereafter as IH), known as inclusionary zoning, refers to a regulatory instrument that uses the land planning system to create affordable housing The basic approach of IH is to require (or encourage) private actors to incorporate affordable housing into their market-rate residential development [2,3]. Instead of constructing affordable housing units, several alternatives might be offered for developers, such as “off-site construction” (to construct affordable housing elsewhere), an “in-lieu fee” (to contribute an amount of money for financing other housing programs, affordable housing programs), and “land dedication” (to donate the equivalent in land assumed to be used to construct affordable homes) [1,4]

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