Short-term rentals (STRs) are critical to regional economies, offering unique and affordable experiences to visitors, generating significant tax revenue to support local governments, and providing hosts significant income. In some places where hotel inventory is limited due to land constraints or other development challenges, STRs expand the number of visitors a region can accommodate, helping bring more money into a region. STRs were also more resilient towards the COVID-19 pandemic due to increased preferences for more isolated, home-like stays—helping regions to maintain a level of tourism in a time when the world shut down.
But STRs are often cited as major contributors to growing housing shortages across California, which has led to various regions adopting or proposing strict regulation on STRs, such as permitting caps, zoning restrictions, and bans. Yet STRs account for about only 1 percent of California’s housing stock and most are expensive single-family homes that would not otherwise add to needed affordable housing supply. STRs are not a significant driver of increasing housing unaffordability and availability, which is instead driven by decades of underdevelopment, especially of affordable multifamily units. Furthermore, skyrocketing housing costs in large cities like Los Angeles and San Francisco and increased remote work resulting from the pandemic are pushing people out to more affordable, rural communities.
Implementing more impactful and innovative strategies is needed to address housing shortages that lead to sustainable growth. Through extensive research and stakeholder engagement, this report, from the Center for Regional Economics and California Center, recommends strategies to increase the supply of workforce and affordable housing in a manner that does not hinder regional tourism growth.
The Honorable Kathleen L. Kraninger Director Consumer Financial Protection Bureau 1700 G Street, NW Washington, DC 20552 Re: Docket No. CFPB-2019-0039; RIN 3170-AA98; Advance Notice of Proposed Rulemaking on the Qualified Mortgage...
This paper sets out proposed administrative actions to reform the housing finance system in the absence of legislation. The goal is to build upon the progress that has been made toward a safer and more effective housing finance system with...
Please read this summary of the virtual roundtable the Institute hosted with Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti that explored how to facilitate a "green recovery" during the COVID-19 induced economic downturn while also advancing the goals...
Housing finance program director Eric Kaplan says "The ramifications of these plans ... cannot be overstated." WASHINGTON, September 5, 2019—The U.S. Department of the Treasury (Treasury) and Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD...
Ted Tozer, Senior Fellow in the Housing Finance Program at the Milken Institute Center for Financial Markets, presents in his written testimony before the U.S. House of Representatives Committee on Financial Services Subcommittee Housing...
The housing finance reform debate has regained momentum, as those involved aim to move towards bipartisan housing finance system legislation in 2018. While different approaches have evolved from the discourse about potential reforms of the...
WASHINGTON, DC—The Milken Institute is mobilizing efforts for the next phase of housing finance reform as policymakers work through the complexities of building a sustainable system. Today, the Institute announced a new policy team with...
There is a simple and sensible way to finally achieve comprehensive housing finance reform in the U.S.. The approach proposed in this paper is to amend the charters of Ginnie Mae, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, and the Federal Housing Finance...
Eight years after the mortgage meltdown, America’s housing system remains broken, serving neither taxpayers nor homeowners properly. Ed DeMarco and Michael Bright have released the first in a four-part series of papers designed to help...