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Can State Review of Local Planning Increase Housing Production?
Comment: Nelson
Comment: Puentes
Housing Affordability and Children's Well-Being: Evidence from the National Survey of America's Families
Modeling the Relationship among Brownfields, Property Values, and Community Revitalization
Does Housing Wealth Contribute to or Temper the Widening Wealth Gap in America?
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Housing Affordability and Children's Well-Being: Evidence from the National Survey of America's Families
Volume 16, Issue 2
2005

Joseph Harkness and Sandra J. Newman

Affordability is a major housing problem for many families. However, no research has documented the harmful effects of unaffordable housing on children. It could hurt poor children by restricting the consumption of other basic necessities or stressing parents’ emotional reserves. This article takes a first look at whether poor children living in areas with more affordable housing fare better than their counterparts in less affordable areas.
 
Results suggest that they do. But some models also suggest that the best educational outcomes are found in the most and least affordable housing markets, the latter likely because of unmeasured variables. Affordable housing has a stronger impact on older children than on younger ones, indicating that the effects may be cumulative. Consistent with studies on the effects of income, affordability appears to affect poor children’s well-being primarily through its impact on the material consumption of basic necessities when they are young.
 
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