How Government Policies Hurt Real Estate with Richard A. Epstein | EP137
Manage episode 425975742 series 3582863
Richard Epstein is our returning guest. Richard is an American legal scholar known for his writings on torts, contracts, property rights, law and economics, classical liberalism, and libertarianism. He is the Laurence A. Tisch Professor of Law and director of the Classical Liberal Institute at New York University, the Peter and Kirsten Bedford Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution
In this episode we talked about:
- Historical Perspective of Land Use and Regulation
- Government Real Estate Agencies
- Inflationary and Interest rates Environment
- Macroeconomic Outlook
Jesse (0s): Welcome to the Working Capital Real Estate Podcast. My name's Jessica Galley, and on this show we discuss all things real estate with investors and experts in a variety of industries that impact real estate. Whether you're looking at your first investment or raising your first fund, join me and let's build that portfolio one square foot at a time. Richard is an American legal scholar known for his writing on torts, contracts, property rights, law and economics, classical liberalism and libertarianism. He is the Lawrence, a Tish professor of law at nyu, and the director of the university's Classical Liberal Institute.
Richard, it's great to have you back on. How you doing?
Richard (39s): It's always great to be here, Jesse.
Jesse (41s): Well, we're gonna have a bit of a, a crash course here in in property rights land use regulation, and kind of talk about how we got to where we, we are right now in, in the US in Canada as it as it relates to property rights. And it'll be topical for anybody interested in real estate, real estate investing development law. And you know, if you're ever interested to see why certain investment firms pick different states or pick different countries, you know, we'll, we'll touch on the intricacies and differences between how some of these laws develop.
But Richard, why don't we, why don't we start from the beginning? You talked about a historical perspective when it comes to land use and regulation, so I'll leave it with you here.
Richard (1m 29s): Okay, look, well the first thing to note is that when densities and real estate densities are very, very low, there's very little reason to have any kind of land use regulation. Land use regulation is a function of having large numbers of people within relatively close levels. One way to try to regulate this is from the private law of nuisance dealing with offensive smells and so forth. And that certainly is a part of the system. But when you're dealing with modern zoning laws, it turns out it's a relatively unimportant part of the system unless you're dealing with certain kind of very difficult industrial manufacturing areas.
But if you're going to the sort of the city life, the, the story really begins in 1916 when in New York City they realize that if you put up certain kinds of large buildings, the equitable building, what it's gonna do is gonna block light in other parts of town. And so the question was, are you willing to suffer that and let people build as they will, or do you think that you could kind of regulate densities and distances? And the initial New York statute was designed to deal with exactly that. And so they put up kinds of restrictions and they were relatively modest, but nonetheless they were there.
The one that was put into place in
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