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The private rental housing market plays an important and growing role in the advanced economies. Providing accommodation for a wider range of households than before the global financial crisis, rental housing is also a key asset class for private individuals and companies, while the rise of Airbnb lettings has pushed up rents and reduced the number of homes available to residents.This edited collection by leading experts in the field analyses recent changes in the private rental market, using case studies from the UK, Europe, Australia and the USA, and assesses the initial impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Editor Peter A. Kemp is Professor of Public Policy at the Blavatnik School of Government, University of Oxford.
1. New Trajectories in Private Rental Housing - Peter A. Kemp2. Growth and Change: Private Renting in Australia in the 21st Century - Kath Hulse3. Rental Housing Dynamics and Their Affordability Impact in the United States - Alex Schwartz4. The Irish Rental Sector and the Post-homeownership Society: Issues and Challenges - Michael Byrne5. Private Renting in England: Growth, Change and Contestation - Tony Crook and Peter A. Kemp6. Private Renting in the Netherlands: Set to Grow? - Marietta E.A. Haffner 7. Suppressive Regulation and Lower Political Esteem: Private Renting in Germany at the Beginning of Decline - Stefan Kofner8. Private Renting in Denmark: Foreign Investors in the Crosshairs - Kath Scanlon9. Norway: Booming Housing Market and Increasing Small-scale Landlordism - Mary Ann Stamsø10. Private Rented Markets in Spain and Housing Affordability - Montserrat Pareja-Eastaway and Teresa Sánchez-Martínez11. The Short Run Impact of Covid-19 on the Private Rented Sector - Tony Crook12. Change and Continuity in Private Rental Housing - Peter A. Kemp
“The book is a welcome addition to existing literature. It is a useful handbook for (comparative) housing scholars, and an important read for researchers, policy makers and practitioners across the nine countries under study, and beyond.” International Journal of Housing Policy