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Do you know the cost of San Jose? The high cost of low growth. (Citings).


THE DUBIOUS HONOR As a verb, to accept a bill of exchange, or to pay a note, check, or accepted bill, at maturity. To pay or to accept and pay, or, where a credit so engages, to purchase or discount a draft complying with the terms of the draft.  of fastest-rising housing costs during the last 25 years belongs to San Jose, California San Jose (IPA: /ˌsænhoʊˈzeɪ/) is the third-largest city in California, and the tenth-largest in the United States. It is the county seat of Santa Clara County. . Housing prices there grew 936 percent over that period, beating out even legendarily expensive San Francisco's 821 percent growth.

Housing demand grew because of the city's Silicon Valley location, the center of the computer and Internet industries during their 1990s gold rush. Meanwhile, supply was restricted thanks to the city's rigorous application of growth control planning dating back to 1970.

Randal O'Toole Randal O'Toole is an American economist and public policy expert. He has held the position of director at the Oregon-based Thoreau Institute since 1975. Since 1995, he has been associated with the Cato Institute as an adjunct scholar.  of the Tho-reau Institute, an Oregon-based free -market environmentalist environmentalist

a person with an interest and knowledge about the interaction of humans and animals with the environment.
 think tank, estimates that urban growth boundaries "UGB" redirects here. UGB may also refer to Unión de Guerreros Blancos (White Warriors' Union), a death squad founded to repress leftist elements in El Salvador.

An urban growth boundary, or UGB
 that limit available land, combined with land use regulations that make building more expensive and time-consuming, have tripled housing costs in San Jose San Jose, city, United States
San Jose (sănəzā`, săn hōzā`), city (1990 pop. 782,248), seat of Santa Clara co., W central Calif.; founded 1777, inc. 1850.
 compared to those in similar cities.

After creating the problem--manifest in 50-year-old two-bedroom houses costing $400,000 and 2,200-square-foot four-bedroom houses costing S630,000--the city government applied the traditional government solution: affordable housing subsidies, in San Jose's case costing $180 million. But O'Toole's calculations indicate that the total increase in housing prices caused by the growth limits could be as high as $100 billion. Some of the $180 million in subsidy subsidy, financial assistance granted by a government or philanthropic foundation to a person or association for the purpose of promoting an enterprise considered beneficial to the public welfare.  money comes from the federal government, so poor residents of Mississippi, for example, are helping house affluent people in San Jose. Even with the subsidies, San Jose housing prices remain higher than most Americans could afford.

San Jose's shocking housing price inflation is a vivid example of how government planning creates unintended and unwanted results when it collides with human choices and unexpected change. It also illustrates the political traps that make changing course difficult. As O'Toole notes, "62 percent of San Jose families own homes today, and they aren't going to want to see the drop in home values that would result from eliminating the urban-growth boundary or relaxing land use regulation."
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Title Annotation:Housing costs
Author:Doherty, Brian
Publication:Reason
Geographic Code:1U9CA
Date:Mar 1, 2003
Words:303
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