Housing affordability debates often shift from land-use policy to subsidy mechanisms, particularly when constraints on buildable land are politically difficult to address. This case study examines whether income-based housing assistance—including rent subsidies, tax incentives, and deed or occupancy covenants—can meaningfully reduce housing costs when land scarcity remains unchanged.
Peer-reviewed research synthesized through Consensus shows that land-use restrictions inflate land values and embed higher costs into every unit built. In such conditions, subsidies can help individual households but do not reliably reduce system-wide housing costs, as elevated land prices and constrained supply absorb much of the benefit.
Income-based eligibility and covenants are already normalized in U.S. housing policy, including rental assistance, tax incentives, and age-restricted (55+) communities. The constraint examined here is not legality, but effectiveness under scarcity.
A recurring claim in housing debates is that affordability can be achieved primarily through subsidies—even when land-use constraints remain in place. This case study asks:
Can income-based housing assistance meaningfully solve affordability problems in markets where regulatory limits inflate the starting price of land and housing?
The evidence supports a clear conclusion: income-based housing assistance—whether delivered through subsidies, tax benefits, or covenants—cannot resolve affordability challenges created by land-use restrictions.
When land is scarce by policy design, subsidies operate downstream of inflated land values and constrained supply. They may allocate affordability among households, but they do not reduce system-wide housing costs.
Affordability problems created by scarcity cannot be solved by subsidizing around them.
Glaeser, E. L., Gyourko, J., & Saks, R. E. (2005). Why is Manhattan so expensive? Regulation and the rise in housing prices. Journal of Law and Economics, 48(2), 331–369.
Gyourko, J., & Molloy, R. (2015). Regulation and housing supply. In Handbook of Regional and Urban Economics (Vol. 5, pp. 1289–1337). Elsevier.
Hsieh, C. T., & Moretti, E. (2019). Housing constraints and spatial misallocation. American Economic Journal: Macroeconomics, 11(2), 1–39.
Quigley, J. M., & Raphael, S. (2005). Regulation and the high cost of housing in California. American Economic Review Papers & Proceedings, 95(2), 323–328.
OECD. (2021). Brick by brick: Building better housing policies.
Braakmann, N., & McDonald, S. (2020). Housing subsidies and property prices: Evidence from England. Regional Science and Urban Economics.
Büchler, S., & Lutz, E. (2024). Making housing affordable? The local effects of relaxing land-use regulation. Journal of Urban Economics.
Cheung, K., Monkkonen, P., & Yiu, C. (2023). The heterogeneous impacts of widespread upzoning: Lessons from Auckland, New Zealand. Urban Studies.
Corinth, K., & Irvine, A. (2023). The effect of relaxing local housing market regulations on federal rental assistance programs. Journal of Urban Economics.
Lens, M. (2022). Zoning, land use, and the reproduction of urban inequality. Annual Review of Sociology.
Manville, M., Lens, M., & Monkkonen, P. (2020). Zoning and affordability. Urban Studies.
Reina, V., O’Regan, K., Jang-Trettien, C., & Kurban, H. (2025). Expanding access to rental assistance. Housing Policy Debate.
ViforJ, R., Pawson, H., Singh, R., & Martin, C. (2022). Analysing the effectiveness of demand-side rental subsidies. International Journal of Housing Policy.
Wijburg, G. (2022). Tax-incentivized housing production and the affordability crisis. Housing Studies.
Consensus Research Synthesis. Land-use restrictions, subsidies, and housing affordability (AI-assisted synthesis of peer-reviewed literature).