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Housing and economic development: The evolution of an idea since 1945
Authors:Richard Harris  Godwin Arku  
Affiliation:aSchool of Geography and Earth Science, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ont., Canada L8S 4K1;bDepartment of Geography and Environmental Studies, Wilfrid Laurier University, 75 University Avenue West, Waterloo, ON, Canada, N2L 3C5
Abstract:The construction and use of decent housing affects economic development through its impact on employment, savings, investment, and labour productivity. These facts have only recently come to be widely acknowledged. Since 1945, housing experts have articulated three views about the role of housing for economic development. In the early post-war decades most writers viewed housing as a social expenditure and a drag on growth. A minority argued that housing could be an important adjunct to specific development projects, usually in isolated locations. Since the 1970s, housing has increasingly come to be seen as a contributor to growth, not only because house building is a major employer with large multiplier effects but also because housing is seen to have social consequences with diverse economic effects. This historical narrative as to how opinion has changed raises questions as to why it has changed.
Keywords:Economic development   House building   Housing   Housing policy   United Nations   World Bank
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