2022
DOI: 10.1016/j.landusepol.2022.106422
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You don’t need zoning to be exclusionary: Manufactured home parks, land-use regulations and housing segregation in the Houston metropolitan area

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Cited by 2 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…-Tax ratio wise, 2%+, New Jersey is followed by Illinois with much less average house sales prices, besides New Hampshire and Connecticut with much less crime rates (Shertzer et al, 2022). -Texas and New York seem to hit 1%-to-2% as large states, with some nationally ranked public schools in New York City, although the city lags the property tax ratio with 0.88% (Rumbach et al, 2022). -Heaven on Earth, one of the smallest states, Hawaii is number one with the lowest tax ratio, coupling with the highest average house sales price, which is followed by one of the largest states, California with similar high average house sales price vs low tax ratio metrics, with not necessarily bad public schools (Kulkarni & Malmendier, 2022).…”
Section: Inter-state Level and Beyondmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…-Tax ratio wise, 2%+, New Jersey is followed by Illinois with much less average house sales prices, besides New Hampshire and Connecticut with much less crime rates (Shertzer et al, 2022). -Texas and New York seem to hit 1%-to-2% as large states, with some nationally ranked public schools in New York City, although the city lags the property tax ratio with 0.88% (Rumbach et al, 2022). -Heaven on Earth, one of the smallest states, Hawaii is number one with the lowest tax ratio, coupling with the highest average house sales price, which is followed by one of the largest states, California with similar high average house sales price vs low tax ratio metrics, with not necessarily bad public schools (Kulkarni & Malmendier, 2022).…”
Section: Inter-state Level and Beyondmentioning
confidence: 99%