Informal housing clearance, housing market, and labor supply
Xintong Yang,
Xin Dong and
Chengdong Yi
Labour Economics, 2022, vol. 78, issue C
Abstract:
Problems with health and safety are associated with informal housing worldwide and have led some governments to respond by implementing clearance policies. However, informal housing plays an important role in providing affordable living space to people with low incomes. Careful evaluation of these informal housing clearance policies and assessment of their impacts is therefore sorely needed. This paper empirically evaluates the effect of the informal housing clearance move of Beijing, induced by an unexpected fire in November 2017. We find that the informal housing clearance move has a significant impact on a city’s housing market, particularly on rents. Further, the informal housing clearance significantly reduces the size of the city’s labor supply in the short term, but as the wage level in the city rises, part of the city’s labor force returns, resulting in insignificant mid- to long-term effects on the labor supply. These effects also extend to the housing and labor markets of the receiving cities. We further build a spatial general equilibrium model with different types of labor and formal and informal housing that considers individual location choices. The model calibration is consistent with the empirical findings. The model simulation shows that in response to the informal housing clearance policy, the utility levels of both Beijing and the receiving cities decrease. We then examine the policy effects of increasing formal housing supply elasticities, the indemificatory housing, and the threshold of entering the formal housing market. We find that increasing formal housing supply elasticity and indemificatory housing while decreasing the threshold of entering the formal housing market can mitigate the increase in rents and decrease in labor supply caused by the informal housing clearance policies, and compensate for the decrease in utility levels.
Keywords: Informal housing; Labor supply; Rent; Wage (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: J61 R31 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2022
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:eee:labeco:v:78:y:2022:i:c:s0927537122000902
DOI: 10.1016/j.labeco.2022.102199
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