IS JOBS-HOUSING BALANCE A TRANSPORTATION ISSUE

Author(s)
GIULIANO, G
Year
Abstract

Jobs-housing balance has become a major planning and public policy issue. Despite its popularity and apparent acceptance among public policy makers as a solution for traffic congestion and air pollution problems, there is little consensus on what jobs-housing balance means and little evidence that a jobs-housing balance policy would have any significant effect on these problems. The jobs-housing balance policy is premised on the idea that job and housing location choices are closely linked, and that policy intervention is required to achieve a balance of housing and jobs. Existing evidence suggests that the relationship between where people choose to live and work is complex, and may have little to do with job access considerations. Further, patterns of urban growth and travel indicate that balancing occurs as part of the urban development process. It is concluded that jobs-housing balance is not an effective solution for traffic congestion and air pollution concerns. Rather, these problems are betteraddressed in a more direct way. This paper appears in transportation research record no. 1305, Finance, planning, programming, economicanalysis, and land development 1991.

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Publication

Library number
I 852081 IRRD 9211
Source

TRANSPORTATION RESEARCH RECORD WASHINGTON D.C. USA U0361-1981 SERIAL 1991-01-01 1305 PAG: 305-312 T36

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