Lecture Notes in Urban Economics and Urban Policy provides a wide-ranging introduction to urban economics and urban policy by Professor John Yinger, one of the world's leading scholars in urban economics. It draws on his extensive teaching and publication record to provide detailed lecture notes for both a PhD level course in urban economics and a master's level course in urban policy. Both the US and the world populations are becoming more and more urbanized, and these notes are designed to help scholars learn and teach about the factors that determine urban residential structure and that lead to urban problems such as inadequate housing, concentrated poverty, an inequitable distribution of local public services, racial and ethnic discrimination in housing, and traffic congestion. Although these notes focus on the US, many of the lessons in the notes apply to other countries as well. They also draw on Professor Yinger's extensive teaching experience and publication record in urban economics and should prove useful to many scholars who want to teach about or study urban areas.
Contents:
- Urban Economics:
- The Basic Urban Model 1: Assumptions
- The Basic Urban Model 2: Solutions
- The Basic Urban Model 3: Comparative Statics
- More General Treatment of Housing Demand
- Estimating Housing Demand
- The Urban Transportation System
- Multiple Worksites and Full Labor Markets
- Household Heterogeneity
- Testing Urban Models
- Neighborhood Amenities
- Bidding and Sorting: The Theory of Local Public Finance
- Property Tax Capitalization
- Hedonic Regressions
- School-Quality Capitalization
- Housing Discrimination
- Notes Based on: "Now You See It, Now You Don't: Why Do Real Estate Agents Withhold Available Houses from Black Customers?"
- Homeownership Gaps Between Ethnic Groups
- Residential Segregation: Measurement, Causes, Consequences
- Mortgage Markets and Predatory Lending
- Mortgage Discrimination
- Urban Policy:
- Introduction
- Evaluating Social Programs
- Housing Concepts, Household Bids
- Household Sorting and Neighborhood Amenities
- Neighborhood Change
- Overview of Housing Markets
- Housing Problems and Federal Housing Programs
- Homelessness
- Race and Ethnicity, Prejudice and Discrimination
- Housing Discrimination and Its Causes
- Residential Segregation: Measurement, Causes, Consequences
- Mortgage Markets and Predatory Lending
- Discrimination in Mortgage Lending
- Poverty: Concepts and Evidence
- Concentrated Poverty
- Welfare Programs and Principles of Welfare Policy
- The New World of Welfare Policy
- Urban Labor Markets
- Human Capital Programs to Promote Community Development
- Financial Capital Programs to Promote Community Development
- Key Issues in Studying Urban Crime
Readership: Students and academics interested in urban economics and urban policy.
John Yinger is Trustee Professor of Public Administration and Economics at the Maxwell School, Syracuse University. He also directs the Education Finance and Accountability Program, which promotes research, education, and debate about fundamental issues in the elementary and secondary school system in the US. Yinger studies racial and ethnic discrimination in housing and mortgage markets; state and local public finance, particularly education; and urban economics. He has published widely in professional journals and is the author, co-author, or editor of five books. He served as senior staff economist in the President's Council of Economic Advisers, and taught at Harvard University and the University of Michigan. Yinger received his PhD from Princeton in 1975.