2018
DOI: 10.1080/10511482.2018.1452043
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The Neighborhood Effects of Federal Historic Tax Credits in Six Legacy Cities

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Cited by 11 publications
(3 citation statements)
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References 35 publications
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“…Recent findings show that across very low‐income and low‐income neighbourhoods in six post‐industrial cities, the historic tax credit produced market‐rate units five‐to‐one over low‐income apartments (Ryberg‐Webster and Kinahan ). In a similar study, Kinahan () found historic tax credit projects correlated to a significant increase in the median household income in neighbourhoods where the redevelopment is located. Sceptics of historic tax credits acknowledge that while they reduce the risk in tricky projects, they ultimately encourage rent‐seeking behaviour as government funds are transferred to “powerful but undeserving constituencies” (Swaim :38).…”
Section: Historic Tax Creditsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Recent findings show that across very low‐income and low‐income neighbourhoods in six post‐industrial cities, the historic tax credit produced market‐rate units five‐to‐one over low‐income apartments (Ryberg‐Webster and Kinahan ). In a similar study, Kinahan () found historic tax credit projects correlated to a significant increase in the median household income in neighbourhoods where the redevelopment is located. Sceptics of historic tax credits acknowledge that while they reduce the risk in tricky projects, they ultimately encourage rent‐seeking behaviour as government funds are transferred to “powerful but undeserving constituencies” (Swaim :38).…”
Section: Historic Tax Creditsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…One in a suite of federal investment credits including the low-income housing and new markets tax credits, the historic tax credit appeared after the national recession and urban fiscal crises of the late 1970s and expanded in and around the 2008 global financial collapse. The federal historic tax credit is supposed to provide property developers with a valuable source of project financing in the 'hard to rehab' places like empty office and industrial buildings (Ryberg-Webster, 2015a;Kinahan, 2019). Yet, regulations prevent the vast majority of developers from claiming the credit for themselves.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…McCabe (2018) drew attention to the importance of this nascent literature on preservation and neighborhood change. Recent work examining neighborhood change following historic preservation includes Kinahan (2018), McCabe and Ellen (2016), Talen et al (2015), Koster et al (2014), and Ryberg-Webster (2015). Alternatively, historic preservation may follow, rather than lead to, demographic change in neighborhoods (Noonan & Krupka, 2010).…”
Section: Historic Preservation and Neighborhood Changementioning
confidence: 99%