Article co-authored by Ron Cheung and 2007 DPDF The Political Economy of Redistribution Fellow Rachel Meltzer.

Residents pay into Homeowners Associations (HOAs) to exert greater control over service provision, their properties and those of their neighbors. HOAs enforce restrictions governing land use within their boundaries, but theory is ambiguous about their impact on public land use. By combining two novel data sets on Florida HOAs and municipal regulations, we examine how HOAs affect public land use regimes for 232 cities. We find that the prevalence of HOAs is positively associated with a propensity for regulation, as are newer and bigger HOAs. Also, HOAs are positively associated with land use techniques that direct development through incentives, rather than mandates.

Publication Details

Title
Homeowners Associations and the Demand for Local Land Use Regulation
Authors
Meltzer, Rachel
Publisher
John Wiley & Sons
Publish Date
August 2013
Citation
Meltzer, Rachel, Homeowners Associations and the Demand for Local Land Use Regulation (John Wiley & Sons, August 2013).
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