Journal of Design and the Built Environment (Jun 2013)

Econometric modelling or institutionalism? A review of the main approaches in analyses of housing regulations

  • Hasniyati Hamzah

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
pp. 1 – 12

Abstract

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The powerful rhetoric of western housing literature examining the effects of regulations on housing provision has had a major influence on the housing policies of developing countries. The mainstream literature adopts neo-classical econometric modelling as the main approach in understanding how housing provision is affected by regulations. Oftentimes, such analyses would reach an unfavourable conclusion regarding the inflationary and restrictive effects of regulations and consequently call for deregulation. Nevertheless, the research approach in the mainstream literature has overlooked the roles and behaviours of housing agents involved in the actual creation of urban landscapes. In other words, these actors and their social interactions within the regulatory environment have been put in the proverbial 'black box'. Aiming to obtain deeper understanding on the effects of housing regulations, other researchers have proposed an alternative approach that opens this processual 'black box' to explain, rather than generalise the effects of regulations. Using institutionalism as the basis for analysis, this second group of literature provides a deeper explanatory analysis of housing regulations. This paper's contribution to existing literature lies not only in the systematic review of relevant housing regulation literature, but also in suggesting an alternative approach to understand the effects of housing regulation.

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