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Pro-cyclical social housing and the crisis of Irish housing policy: marketization, social housing and the property boom and bust
Author(s)
Date Issued
2017-03-01
Date Available
2019-03-26T13:25:58Z
Abstract
This article analyzes the role of social housing in Ireland’s property bubble and its experience of the global financial crisis. The article argues that over recent decades social housing has been transformed from a countercyclical measure which counterbalances the market into a procyclical measure which fuelled Ireland’s housing boom. The reform of social housing financing and acquisition mechanisms has embedded social housing in the boom/bust dynamics of the private housing system. Analyzing the shifting relationship between social and private housing is crucial to understanding the role of housing policy in Ireland’s property bubble as well as the current housing crisis. Despite being caused by problems in the private housing and financial systems, the crisis has had very negative consequences for social housing, thus producing a crisis across the housing system as a whole.
Type of Material
Journal Article
Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Journal
Housing Policy Debate
Volume
28
Issue
1
Start Page
50
End Page
63
Copyright (Published Version)
2017 Taylor & Francis
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
File(s)
No Thumbnail Available
Name
HPD_article_revised_version_-for_repisitory.docx
Size
838.06 KB
Format
Microsoft Word
Checksum (MD5)
4cbb1f011a3aa8b96bd312c230e68fb6
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