
1A The Evolution Of The American Housing Crisis
Mar 24, 2026
David Garcia, a housing policy researcher at UC Berkeley, and Rhonda Kaysen, a New York Times real estate reporter, discuss U.S. housing affordability and supply shortfalls. They cover the Senate housing bill’s provisions, zoning and local incentives, build-to-rent limits, conversion of commercial space, and how policy interacts with market forces like rents, prices, and construction costs.
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Private Equity Created A Single Family Rental Market
- Institutional investors (private equity, pension funds) bought many post-2008 foreclosures and created a new single-family rental market.
- The bill proposes limits on built-to-rent holdings, requiring large owners to sell after seven years if they own over 350 units.
Austin Shrunk A 'Compatibility' Rule And Opened Housing
- Austin cut a 540-foot compatibility 'force field' that limited building height down to 75 feet, unlocking significant new housing.
- That political shift happened after residents tired of skyrocketing prices and elected a more pro-housing council.
Eliminate Parking Minimums To Fit More Housing
- Remove or loosen parking minimums so developers can build more units instead of space for cars.
- Austin eliminated parking requirements and now projects build roughly 70–80% of prior parking, increasing unit counts 20–50% per project.

