cover image: State Planning for the Housing Market Is Failing Southern California

20.500.12592/2mquzzj

State Planning for the Housing Market Is Failing Southern California

8 Oct 2024

California's Regional Housing Needs Assessment process is decades old, but for all the conflict it generates, there is little evidence that it has balanced housing supply and demand or made housing affordable for the majority of Californians. The state should stop performing RHNAs and instead let market forces determine the housing supply. The state government began asking and ultimately ordering local governments to prepare housing elements as part of their general plans in the late 1960s. By the 1980s, the California Department of Housing and Community Development was benchmarking these housing elements against centrally determined housing needs. During this period, Southern California experienced rapid population growth. Across the six counties overseen by the Southern California Association of Governments, decennial population growth consistently topped 12% and was as high as 26% in the 1980s. (Those counties are Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside, San Bernardino, Ventura and Imperial.) So, there was at least a plausible argument for government action to ensure sufficient housing production.

Authors

Marc Joffe

Pages
2
Published in
United States of America

Table of Contents