Year Published
2021
Abstract
Housing supply elasticity estimates for cities in large and rapidly urbanizing countries like
India can tell us whether their urban housing markets’ supply keeps pace with the rising demand.
The case of India is particularly interesting in this regard because of its variety of
housing typologies. We estimate the supply elasticity of (1) durable or formal houses made
of concrete, bricks, and metal, (2) non-durable or informal houses made of thatch, mud, plastic,
etc. and typically found in slums, and (3) vacant residential housing units in urban India
between 2001 and 2011. We use two migration-inducing exogenous events — negative rainfall
shocks and a highway upgrade program — occurring in distant states as demand shifters
for local urban housing markets. We apply the Rosen-Roback spatial equilibrium framework
to show that the negative rainfall shocks and the highway upgrade program in distant states
increased inter-state migration in India. This increase led to urban population growth, and
therefore, higher demand for housing in local urban markets. Our findings are three-fold.
First, we estimate that the decadal supply elasticity of durable housing in urban India is 1.62.
Second, we find that the supply elasticity of non-durable housing is −0.49. A negative supply
elasticity value for non-durable houses is consistent with the existence of urban gentrification
through the demolition and upgradation of slums. And finally, we estimate the elasticity of
vacant residential housing units’ supply to be 2.62. We posit that a relatively higher vacant
housing supply elasticity reflects speculative building by developers in Indian cities during the
2000s.
India can tell us whether their urban housing markets’ supply keeps pace with the rising demand.
The case of India is particularly interesting in this regard because of its variety of
housing typologies. We estimate the supply elasticity of (1) durable or formal houses made
of concrete, bricks, and metal, (2) non-durable or informal houses made of thatch, mud, plastic,
etc. and typically found in slums, and (3) vacant residential housing units in urban India
between 2001 and 2011. We use two migration-inducing exogenous events — negative rainfall
shocks and a highway upgrade program — occurring in distant states as demand shifters
for local urban housing markets. We apply the Rosen-Roback spatial equilibrium framework
to show that the negative rainfall shocks and the highway upgrade program in distant states
increased inter-state migration in India. This increase led to urban population growth, and
therefore, higher demand for housing in local urban markets. Our findings are three-fold.
First, we estimate that the decadal supply elasticity of durable housing in urban India is 1.62.
Second, we find that the supply elasticity of non-durable housing is −0.49. A negative supply
elasticity value for non-durable houses is consistent with the existence of urban gentrification
through the demolition and upgradation of slums. And finally, we estimate the elasticity of
vacant residential housing units’ supply to be 2.62. We posit that a relatively higher vacant
housing supply elasticity reflects speculative building by developers in Indian cities during the
2000s.
Research Category