ABSTRACT

Jim Kemeny develops a conceptual framework to present a critical study of comparative rental markets. The framework centres around the concept of the process of maturation of cost rental housing and two policies for handling this which have been adopted by industrial societies. These are, firstly, the Anglo-Saxon "dualist" system, seen in Great Britain, Australia and New Zealand, and secondly, the Germanic "unitary market" system, seen in Sweden, The Netherlands, Germany and Switzerland. Using a comparative approach based around international case studies, Jim Kemeny shows how each system stems from different power structures, is governed by different policy strategies, and is informed by different ideological views of how markets operate. Offering a radical critique of the orthodox view, it is argued that the time is now right for English-speaking nations to abandon state control over cost renting but allow to it to compete directly with profit renting, as in the "unitary market" model. International in scope, this volume should be of interest to researchers in housing, sociology and related fields.

part |2 pages

Part I From implicit anglo-saxon model to a theory of change

chapter |3 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|15 pages

Profit markets and social markets

chapter 2|16 pages

The Romeo error in comparative renting

chapter 4|12 pages

Reconceptualising rental systems

part |2 pages

Part II Case studies

chapter |2 pages

Introduction

chapter 6|22 pages

Case studies in the maturation process

chapter 7|15 pages

Command policies

chapter 8|13 pages

Market policies

part |2 pages

Part III Research and policy implications

chapter |2 pages

Introduction

chapter 10|17 pages

From command economy to the social market

chapter |5 pages

Summary and conclusions