Academic literature on the topic 'Regulated rents'

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Journal articles on the topic "Regulated rents"

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Tyrcha, Adam Alexander. "The Impact of Migration on a Regulated Rental Market." REGION 7, no. 1 (March 23, 2020): 35–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.18335/region.v7i1.268.

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Throughout the 20th century, the Swedish rental market has generally been heavily regulated, with both a rental queue in place, as well as generally fixed rents, with limited ability to vary these. Though these systems remain in place, in the 21st century, a number of deregulatory measures have been taken. Meanwhile, evolving migration flows and strong humanitarian migration in particular have continued. These developments combined mean that now more than ever, impacts of migration on the rental housing market are increasingly likely. This paper investigates the relationship between foreign-born and internal migration and rents on the housing market. Findings suggest that foreign-born migration, and refugees in particular, impact rents, especially in major cities.
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Black, Sandra E., and Philip E. Strahan. "The Division of Spoils: Rent-Sharing and Discrimination in a Regulated Industry." American Economic Review 91, no. 4 (September 1, 2001): 814–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.1257/aer.91.4.814.

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Until the middle of the 1970's, regulations constrained banks' ability to enter new markets. Over the subsequent 25 years, states gradually lifted these restrictions. This paper tests whether rents fostered by regulation were shared with labor, and whether firms were discriminating by sharing these rents disproportionately with male workers. We find that average compensation and average wages for banking employees fell after states deregulated. Male wages fell by about 12 percent after deregulation, whereas women's wages fell by only 3 percent, suggesting that rents were shared mainly with men. Women's share of employment in managerial positions also increased following deregulation. (JEL G2, J3, J7, L5)
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Teresa, Benjamin F. "Managing fictitious capital: The legal geography of investment and political struggle in rental housing in New York City." Environment and Planning A: Economy and Space 48, no. 3 (August 12, 2015): 465–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0308518x15598322.

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Since 2001 investors have purchased rent-regulated housing in New York City with heightened expectation for financial performance, placing pressure on tenants and communities through increasing rents, harassment, eviction, and when financial targets are not met, physical deterioration of buildings. At the heart of this investment strategy is fictitious capital, the extension of credit based on assumptions about future events. This paper shows that beyond assessments about the “truth” or rationality of the expectations underlying fictitious capital, the management of value as a problem is at stake. When the expectations underlying fictitious capital are not realized, a network of actors engage in a set of legal–financial practices to manage the value of rent-regulated multifamily buildings, including banking regulation and its exception, mortgage securitization and special servicing, distressed debt markets, rent stabilization, and foreclosure law. The breakdown of the assumptions of fictitious capital reveals new challenges and opportunities for tenant activism and policy to intervene in preserving rent-regulated housing. The paper focuses on how this financialization of housing not only serves as a moment for the increasing role of financial actors and imperatives, but also how it drives tenant activism and policy to engage legal–financial practices to redefine the tenant–landlord relationship and to tie financial expectations more closely to the material reality of tenants and communities.
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Bettey, Joseph. "‘Ancient custom time out of mind’: copyhold tenure in the west country in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries." Antiquaries Journal 89 (May 19, 2009): 307–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0003581509000055.

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AbstractCopyhold tenure for a number of lives, regulated by manorial custom, was by far the most common form of landholding throughout much of the West Country during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, and was only gradually replaced by leaseholds for a term of years during the eighteenth century. Manorial custom, the body of local law and traditional usage, hallowed by long use and enforced in the manorial court, governed all aspects of farming practice, transfer of holdings, entry fines, rents, heriots, rules of cultivation, access to common grazing, wood, stone, fuel and the rights of widows. This paper uses examples from Wiltshire and Dorset to show the great variety of manorial customs, the effect these had on the lives of copyhold tenants and the problems which some long-established customs could cause for landowners.
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Jankovic, Ivan. "Functioning of market economy and rent-seeking: Why it is necessary to diminish the role of government in economic affairs?" Medjunarodni problemi 56, no. 2-3 (2004): 189–220. http://dx.doi.org/10.2298/medjp0403189j.

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At the beginning, the author points out that rent-seeking economy is a distinctive phenomenon for majority of the contemporary market economies. It is reflected in the aspirations of the well organised interest groups to capture public choice and politicians as a tool to gain non-market benefits for themselves, or to take activities to gain income by non-market redistributions instead to do it on the market. According to the author examples of rent-seeking economy are antitrust, arbitrary export-import restrictions, subsidies for various sectors of economy, unions' practices of closed shop or collective bargaining. The author notes that there are legitimate public goods and services (such as military and police services or infrastructure) and therefore legitimate taxing and spending for providing of such public necessities. In his opinion, however, rent-seeking economy results from the growing government intervention in economy based upon widening of its role and responsibility to handle a wide spectrum of illegitimate ??social?? issues, rather than rest upon better providing of classical government services. Rent-seeking economy is a result of abandoning the strict market economy with no or little income gained by the extra market redistribution. The social environment where it is permissible and desirable to remove as great as possible economic activities from the free, non-regulated markets to the public sector or to the sector of the highly regulated economy which is cartelised by coercion, leads entrepreneurs to change their orientation. They do not perceive the regular competition as the best way to make success, but by lobbying with the political bodies. The basic rule of rent-seeking is that when there is a chance to gain rent, there will be someone who will try to get it. Therefore, in the author's opinion the government and the public inclining towards state interventionism are the main to blame for the rise of rent-seeking. This is because they make chances to gain rents since the general social and political environment enables it, as well as because there is an insufficiency of detailed legislative and constitutional restrictions on the role of the government in economy. Therefore, the basic condition for elimination or at least reduction of the scope of rent-seeking economy, in the opinion of the author, is to drastically diminish the role of the government in economic affairs. In that way the economy would be strictly separated form the politics, and entrepreneurs would be sent a signal that the reallocation of resources from productive to lobbying activities for gaining privileges is not an appropriate way to gain income. Within this context, the author points to consideration of the achievements of the James Buchanan's public choice theory that deals with the defects of political decision-making. He also points to the fact that the essence of the liberal constitutional reform that could diminish the scope of rent-seeking could be best perceived in the words stated by Friedrich Hayek the Nobel prize winner, saying that the government should be prohibited to employ ??coercive discriminatory acts??. This means that the government should not employ its monopoly of physical force to award economic privileges to anyone, but it should adopt laws of general use to be applied to the unknown number of cases in the future, concludes the author.
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Rude, James, and Ellen Goddard. "Canadian dairy regulations as a driver of foreign direct investment: the case of Saputo." International Food and Agribusiness Management Review 24, no. 3 (April 13, 2021): 421–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.22434/ifamr2020.0116.

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Across North America dairy processors are facing financial difficulties, yet a Canadian processor continues to grow through acquisitions of its competitors. This company, Saputo, grew up in a highly regulated marketplace where input raw milk supplies are restricted, input prices are inflated and imports of final product are restricted. This study asks if the Canadian system of dairy supply management prodded and assisted Saputo into making acquisitions at home and abroad. An empirical model estimates the probability of Saputo making acquisitions as a function of factors influenced by supply management and control variables accounting for Saputo’s financial performance. The results indicate that cash flows, which may be increased by regulatory rents, and a measure of restrictiveness of the Canadian milk supply, both are statistically significant positive determinants of the probability that Saputo will make an acquisition. On average over the estimation period removing the Canadian supply managed regime would reduce the probability of acquisitions by 7%. The implication is that the Canadian system is losing investment and employment opportunities by retaining its restrictive regulatory system.
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Amaral, Luciano. "Imperfect but true competition: innovation and profitability in Portuguese banking during the golden age (1950–1973)." Financial History Review 20, no. 3 (November 1, 2013): 305–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0968565013000206.

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The institutional environment of Portuguese banking during the golden age years of economic growth (1950–73) has been criticised in many instances, at the time and in recent literature. Direct observers of the period as well as historians have stressed two main aspects of that environment: excessive protection of existing banks, allowing them to obtain high rents, which represented a disincentive for them to compete and innovate; excessive concentration of their activity on short-term commercial paper, thus preventing them from contributing to finance growth. There seems to be a contradiction here, however, with the high growth rates of the years 1950 to 1973. The apparent contradiction is not limited to Portugal, in fact, as rapid growth in many economies in that period occurred within a framework of heavily regulated financial systems. This is the ‘financial paradox’ of the golden age. Portugal is an interesting case in the international perspective. As in the rest of the western world, legislation repressed banking quite tightly, but banks circumvented the law and competed with each other. The signs of competition were visible mostly in two dimensions: the growth of time deposits and geographical expansion.
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Zarecor, Kimberly Elman. "Socialist Neighborhoods after Socialism." East European Politics and Societies: and Cultures 26, no. 3 (December 22, 2011): 486–509. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0888325411428968.

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The Czech Republic’s socialist-era neighborhoods are largely intact twenty years after the end of Communist Party rule. These buildings will be rehabilitated, but not replaced, because of financial and logistical constraints. In the context of the country’s accession to the European Union in 2004 and the recent global economic crisis, this essay questions what can and should be done in an effort to make these neighborhoods better places to live in the present and the future. It starts with a brief history of postwar housing construction and socialist-era design methodologies, exploring postwar architectural practice and innovations in construction technology that were connected to the industrialization of housing production. The role of the Baťa Company in the development of panelák technology is described. In the context of post-socialist rehabilitation efforts, the discussion addresses current housing policy including regulated rents and the shift in emphasis from renting to ownership. Government subsidies and grant programs are considered, as well as problems such as physical degradation and social segregation. The essay proposes that for the future the social and spatial ideas that were part of the original designs may be more important than the architectural style of individual buildings.
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Burganov, Rais, Elena Dolonina, and Zulfia Burganova. "Problems of Modeling the Relationship of Family Related Groups and the State in Political Rent-Seeking Society." SHS Web of Conferences 76 (2020): 01039. http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/shsconf/20207601039.

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The search for political rent is an essential attribute of the coexistence of the interests of family-related groups and the state. A civilized solution to problems in this area has not been fully developed, even in the developed countries of the world. In the media, materials on clan approaches to the distribution of the country's resources are regularly thrown up, which increases tension in human society and uncertainties in future development. In order to take proactive measures, it is necessary to model the state and prospects of the relationship of family-related groups and the state. The paper discusses some approaches to modeling the relationship of family-related groups and the state in political rent-seeking societ. The research methodology uses data from a survey of student youth, which is divided into three groups: students' perceptions of the current political and economic atmosphere of society, assessment of opportunities for access to political rent through family-related ties, assessment of measures for state regulation of the process of obtaining political rent by representatives of family-related groups society. According to the author, in the political life of society, institutions should be created to regulate the behavior of family-related groups in the implementation of political rents.
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Stebletska, Yu. "Evolution stages of the spatial urban development." Bulletin of Taras Shevchenko National University of Kyiv. Geography, no. 65 (2016): 61–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.17721/1728-2721.2016.65.13.

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The factors influencing the change of urban space were considered. Key stages of urban geohistory were emphasized and in accordance with that the main historical types of cities were grouped. Each evolution stage of the spatial urban development was in detail analyzed. The main features, processes, and superior system of settlement for all historical types of cities were defined. Outstanding characteristics of all historical types of cities of all ages were determined and described. A table for features of historical types of cities on key indicators was designed. A decisive influence of economic systems on urban form and its social geography was defined. The influence of the transition of settlements from the early preindustrial economy to the classical industrial city through a capitalist economy, and later to modern approaches and trends in the so-called theory of “post-industrial” city through research of urban geohistory was traced. The way of decay of urban planning of preindustrial age from the rigidly regulated by the state, however well-ordered and well-thought-out planning on the basis of an orthogonal grid in ancient cities, to the spontaneous and disordered development in the Middle Ages, when the core of the city was the fortress and monastery, was studied. Typicality of the cities of the industrial age of the return from the uncontrolled growth, when the decisive role was played by differentiated rents for land in the early models of the industrial city, to the functional zoning in the age of modernism was defined. Urban planning in the post-industrial age in terms of the traditional city through the global processes of urbanization, which create new socio-spatial forms of settlements (metropolitan region, multicentered metropolitan regions) were described. The impact of globalization on the urban space and on creation of new forms of urban settlements was considered. Social and economic features that indicate the development of postmodern metropolis were considered.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Regulated rents"

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Tegze, Ondřej. "Vytvoření cenových podkladů pro stanovení tržního nájemného v bytech pro lokalitu Brno - Žabovřesky." Master's thesis, Vysoké učení technické v Brně. Ústav soudního inženýrství, 2011. http://www.nusl.cz/ntk/nusl-232534.

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The aim of my diploma thesis is to prepare documents for price calculation and determination of the common rent in the suburb of Brno - Žabovřesky. In this work, I used information from executed leases Realtors Matras&Matras & Real Estate Ltd. and Dvorak. Analysis of factors affecting price formation I have devoted the factors that I considered at that locality as valid for determining the price and verifying their influence on rental prices. I added my own factor into the monitored critical factors. This factor is noise. As the analysis results showed it was a major factor that significantly affects the final price of the lease. His inclusion among the decisive factors was correct. By setting standards and calculation of coefficients, I obtain results that helped determine the normal cost of rent and contributed to the view of the importance of determining the level of the individual factors to calculate the final rental price. Data collection, analysis and examination of the relationships between the key factors, I see as a guide for calculating the normal price, which will be used by districts and the real estate market.
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Matras, Tomáš. "Vytvoření cenových podkladů pro stanovení tržního nájemného v bytech pro lokalitu Brno - střed." Master's thesis, Vysoké učení technické v Brně. Ústav soudního inženýrství, 2011. http://www.nusl.cz/ntk/nusl-232533.

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The motivation of this diploma thesis is the end of price regulation on December 31, 2012 lease revenues resulting from this one and the possibility of disputes over the normal rent. The aim of this work is an effort to raise awareness of the normal rent for apartments in the area of Brno-Center. Determine factors that affect the attainment of rental dwellings without a price control system design using the system of essential values "SPV". Based on the selection of appropriate resources to create a database for pricing documentation and analysis of the significant influences that affect the total amount of rent and rent of the unit. These influences are the apartment layout, location and condition of the apartment. The contribution of this work is to create materials and price impact assessment prior to the rental unit and rents, which may serve as a source for other expert tasks.
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Kolman, Ondřej. "Deregulace nájemného a proces stanovení místně obvyklého nájemného." Master's thesis, Vysoká škola ekonomická v Praze, 2011. http://www.nusl.cz/ntk/nusl-71699.

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The purpose of the thesis is to evaluate the regulation and manner of deregulation in the Czech Republic. The first part describes regulation in general and interest groups approach to the deregulation of rents. In society there are many myths about rent control that are overturned at work. The rent control in the Czech Republic, the legal framework of regulation and regulation impacts are discussed in next part of the work. Then are described the impacts and possible ways of solving problems associated with deregulation. Ways of rent deregulation in selected foreign countries are compared with the way deregulation in the Czech Republic. In the practical part are analysed revenues and expenditures of owner of real estate property during the regulated years and modelled an example of fair rents made with regard to the cost of tenant and lessor.
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Cheng, Yuet-sang, and 鄭悦生. "The effectiveness of market rent policy of the Hong Kong Housing Authority: a study of regulated price." Thesis, The University of Hong Kong (Pokfulam, Hong Kong), 1999. http://hub.hku.hk/bib/B31968545.

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Herelová, Kateřina. "Kritická analýza bytového fondu v České republice." Master's thesis, Vysoké učení technické v Brně. Ústav soudního inženýrství, 2010. http://www.nusl.cz/ntk/nusl-232494.

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Work on the topic of Critical analysis of the housing in the Czech Republic, I chose to its timeliness and problematičnost. I wanted to cover all the pitfalls in the work of housing – legislation that was adopted and the resulting situation of housing on troubleshooting regulated "privileged" rents and rental market. Nastiňuji, how the State takes care of the socially weaker populations (housing) from 2009 it rose sharply citizens. Work to characterize housing in Prague, Brno and Ostrava. The objective of housing is the regulation of the hiring of total liberalisation of the real estate market for tackling I have drawn up a questionnaire, which tracks the housing facilities regions. The biggest problem I've had little social housing solutions, both financially and time consuming.
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Cheng, Yuet-sang. "The effectiveness of market rent policy of the Hong Kong Housing Authority : a study of regulated price /." Hong Kong : University of Hong Kong, 1999. http://sunzi.lib.hku.hk/hkuto/record.jsp?B22360013.

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Průchová, Bohuslava. "Regulace na trhu nájemního bydlení v České republice." Master's thesis, Vysoká škola ekonomická v Praze, 2007. http://www.nusl.cz/ntk/nusl-1391.

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Práce rozebírá dopady regulace nájemného v ČR. Nastiňuje pozitivní dopady deregulace s ohledem na regionální aspekt. Zabývá se historickými souvislostmi regulace nájemného a vývojem právních předpisů. Vysvětluje, proč se v politické sféře neprosazují ekonomicky efektivní řešení. Jsou zde charakterizovány zájmové skupiny ovlivňující politická rozhodnutí v oblasti bydlení a analyzovány výsledky jejich činnosti. Je provedeno srovnání s regulací nájemného v jiných zemích zejména z hlediska příležitostí k dobývání renty. Navrhuje vlastní řešení problémové situace.
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Sundell, Charlotte, and Micael Magnusson. "Regional Perspectives on New Construction of Swedish Rental Apartments : A study of rent regulated real estate market interaction." Thesis, Jönköping University, JIBS, Economics, 2010. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:hj:diva-12270.

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Patrick, Meagan Cherita. "Data and decontrol : a civic-tech approach for identification of predatory landlords in the New York City rent-regulated housing market." Thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2019. https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/121750.

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Thesis: M.C.P., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Urban Studies and Planning, 2019
Cataloged from PDF version of thesis.
Includes bibliographical references (pages 48-49).
With New York City in the throes of a severe affordable housing crisis, the City government and housing advocates have worked tirelessly towards the identification of landlords whose profit model is based on fraudulent deregulation of the rent-regulated housing stock. The problem is that these bad actors are not so easy to identify. With the refusal of the controlling agency, the New York State Department of Housing and Community Renewal (DHCR), to release data on units lost from the market, along the widespread use of limited liability companies (LLCs) to obscure ownership, it's difficult to both track changes in the market and to associate those changes with problematic actors.
The role of this thesis is to explore the creation of a methodology incorporating pre-existing work at the city and civilian level ("civic tech") to identify suspect patterns of behavior, recognizing that improved access to ownership data is key to identifying spatial and temporal patterns of change in the classification and pricing of rent-stabilized units. By leveraging tax data scraped by civic tech activists and cross-referencing it with property data, a relational database and associated SQL queries can make possible the identification of concentrated patterns of behavior occurring on properties by owners who have otherwise proven to be particularly adept at staying hidden. Look-up tables have been incorporated to create a method of analysis which is systematic and can be maintained and augmented as new information on ownership and management is accumulated over time.
This work is split into three parts: The first part of this work will begin with an initial exploration into the academic literature on rent-regulated housing, as well as the role of civic tech to supplement that literature. The second part of this work will outline the data integration methodology, using one census tract as a case study to test the feasibility of this approach. Finally, the work will explore ways in which this work could be implemented on a larger scale and the potential impacts of a successful execution of this methodology on legislation and prosecution targeting predatory landlords.
by Meagan Cherita Patrick.
M.C.P.
M.C.P. Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Urban Studies and Planning
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Rosenberg, Jan. "Koeficienty odlišnosti pro cenovou mapu nájmu bytů v Blansku." Master's thesis, Vysoké učení technické v Brně. Ústav soudního inženýrství, 2013. http://www.nusl.cz/ntk/nusl-232832.

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This master´s thesis deals with the coefficents of difference for map of rent in Blansko. The main aim of this thesis is to describe the historical development of regulated rents from the interwar period to the present. It is the aim of this thesis to establish a system of coefficients that will lead to solving the problem of determining the market rent after deregulation. This problem was solved on the basis of statistical processing created database offers rentals in Blansko. The result is an equation transformed into a program in which the assessment of individual coefficients of difference is to calculate market rent.
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Books on the topic "Regulated rents"

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New York (State). Legislature. Assembly. Standing Committee on Housing. Public hearing, rent regulated housing. New York]: EN-DE Reporting Services, 2009.

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Housing, New York (State) Legislature Assembly Standing Committee on. Public hearing on harassment and eviction of rent regulated tenants. [New York?]: EN-DE Reporting Service, 2006.

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Rent regulation after 50 years: An overview of New York State's rent regulated housing, 1993. [Albany, NY?]: New York State Division of Housing and Community Renewal, Office of Rent Administration, 1994.

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Hopkins, Thomas. Economical Enquiries Relative to the Laws Which Regulate Rent, Profit, Wages, and the Value of Money. HardPress, 2020.

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Bebbington, Anthony, Abdul-Gafaru Abdulai, Denise Humphreys Bebbington, Marja Hinfelaar, Cynthia A. Sanborn, Jessica Achberger, Celina Grisi Huber, Verónica Hurtado, Tania Ramírez, and Scott D. Odell. Mining, Political Settlements, and Inclusive Development in Peru. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198820932.003.0002.

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This chapter examines how political factors have influenced mineral extraction, governance, and development in Peru since the late nineteenth century. It argues that the legacies of the past have weighed heavily in contemporary governance, but also points to periods in which shifting political alliances and agency aimed to alter past legacies and introduce positive institutional change. The chapter identifies three periods with distinct and relatively stable arrangements for the distribution of power. For the most recent, post-2000 period, it discusses how government responses to social conflict included the creation of institutions to redistribute mining rents, regulate environmental impacts, and promote indigenous participation. However, it argues that political instability and fragmentation have inhibited the effectiveness of these institutions and of longer-term policymaking in general, which in turn explains Peru’s persistent reliance on natural resource extraction and the challenges to more inclusive and sustainable development.
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Hamilton, John T. Before Discipline. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198818489.003.0002.

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If a discipline rests on a canonical body of knowledge to be learned, understood, and mastered, if it marks out a cognitive space that has been delineated by a particular horizon, then philology—and, by extension, philosophy—may be located more at the margins of these disciplinary sites. Perhaps it would be more correct to regard both philology and philosophy as pre-disciplines, as modes of free but rational questioning that comprise the conditions of possibility for authorized, regulated, disciplinary work. To illustrate, the present article turns to Pascal Quignard’s essayistic reflections as an example of a philological approach that concerns the pre- or proto-semantic production of meaning, focusing in particular on the figure of the horizon and on the concept of the aorist that inheres in the French jadis.
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Hylton, Keith N. Economics of Criminal Procedure. Edited by Francesco Parisi. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199684250.013.025.

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This chapter reviews the economics of criminal procedure, proceeding through four topics in the literature. First, it reviews the implications of substantive criminal law theories for criminal procedure. The second part discusses the error cost model of criminal procedure, which is the dominant framework and posits that criminal procedure rules are designed to minimize the sum of error and administrative costs. The third part reviews the public choice model of criminal procedure. Under this model, criminal procedure rules are designed largely to regulate rent-seeking activity. The last part of this chapter discusses some of the empirical work on procedure that bears directly on deterrence and welfare effects.
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George, Walker, Purves Robert, and Blair Michael. Part III Financial Sectors and Activities, 20 Home Finance Transactions. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/law/9780198793809.003.0020.

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This chapter examines the regulatory regime for building societies in their capacity as lenders and for home finance transactions, which includes lending on mortgage secured on domestic property, home purchase business, and home reversion business. It begins with a discussion of the supervision and regulation of building societies before the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 (FSMA) and under FSMA. It then considers some key developments relating to the regulation of mortgage and home finance business, including the European Commission's introduction of the Mortgage Credit Directive and the replacement of the Financial Services Authority by the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) and the Prudential Regulation Authority (PRA). The chapter also analyses the regulation of the consumer buy to let mortgage business, home reversion plans, home purchase plans, and regulated sale and rent back agreements before concluding with a review of the Prudential Sourcebook for Mortgage and Home Finance Firms and Insurance Intermediaries.
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Book chapters on the topic "Regulated rents"

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de La Paz, Paloma Taltavull, and Irene Peña Cuenca. "Spanish REITs: The New Regulated SOCIMIs." In Real Estate Investment Trusts in Europe, 177–94. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-36856-1_13.

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Vagstad, Steinar. "Information Rent and Technology Choice in a Regulated Firm." In Contributions to Economics, 76–94. Heidelberg: Physica-Verlag HD, 1997. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-46988-6_5.

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Teresa, Benjamin F. "Rental Fictions." In Land Fictions, 124–43. Cornell University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.7591/cornell/9781501753732.003.0007.

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This chapter begins with a review of twentieth-century rent regulation in New York City, which enables the section to show how the erosion of rent regulation in the 1990s paved the way for the financialization of housing in the 2000s. It shows how historically devalued lands can become new sources of profit without requiring wholesale regulatory transformation. While protective countermovements against housing market liberalization have tended to operate through an individualistic logic of consumer protection, the chapter explicates how such efforts have tacitly accepted commodity housing as an inevitable future, with the result that speculative investment in rent-regulated housing has emerged as a major growth sector. Parallel fictions of “undervalued assets” focused on core, upmarket Manhattan districts and “mismanaged assets” focused on lower-income, mostly outer-borough neighborhoods have helped financial institutions engineer the facts of rising rent. Ultimately, the chapter investigates how these narratives of undervalued assets and mismanaged resources operate as fictions driving housing financialization.
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4

Teresa, Benjamin F. "6 RENTAL FICTIONS Speculating in Rent-Regulated Housing in New York City." In Land Fictions, 124–43. Cornell University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9781501753749-008.

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5

Abbey, Robert M., and Mark B. Richards. "13. Business tenancies and the Landlord and Tenant Act 1954, Part II." In A Practical Approach to Conveyancing. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/he/9780198787563.003.0013.

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This chapter considers the provisions of the Landlord and Tenant Act 1954, Part II, which regulates the ways in which business tenancies may be terminated and gives statutory protection to business tenants. Topics discussed include agreements to which the 1954 Act applies; requirement for ‘tenancy’ tenancies excluded from statutory protection; requirement for ‘occupation’ methods of termination under the 1954 Act; Section 40 notices; rules for service of notices; interim rent applications; landlord’s statutory grounds of opposition; tenant’s right to compensation for failure to obtain a new tenancy; and court order for new tenancy.
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Abbey, Professor Robert M., and Mark B. Richards. "13. Business tenancies and the Landlord and Tenant Act 1954, Part II." In A Practical Approach to Conveyancing. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/he/9780198747642.003.0013.

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This chapter considers the provisions of the Landlord and Tenant Act 1954, Part II, which regulates the ways in which business tenancies may be terminated and gives statutory protection to business tenants. Topics discussed include agreements to which the 1954 Act applies; requirement for ‘tenancy’ tenancies excluded from statutory protection; requirement for ‘occupation’ methods of termination under the 1954 Act; Section 40 notices; rules for service of notices; interim rent applications; landlord’s statutory grounds of opposition; tenant’s right to compensation for failure to obtain a new tenancy; and court order for new tenancy.
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Abbey, Robert M., and Mark B. Richards. "13. Business Tenancies and the Landlord and Tenant Act 1954, Part II." In A Practical Approach to Conveyancing. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/he/9780198823087.003.0013.

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This chapter considers the provisions of the Landlord and Tenant Act 1954, Part II, which regulates the ways in which business tenancies may be terminated and gives statutory protection to business tenants. Topics discussed include agreements to which the 1954 Act applies; requirement for ‘tenancy’ tenancies excluded from statutory protection; requirement for ‘occupation’ methods of termination under the 1954 Act; Section 40 notices; rules for service of notices; interim rent applications; landlord’s statutory grounds of opposition; tenant’s right to compensation for failure to obtain a new tenancy; and court order for new tenancy.
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Abbey, Robert M., and Mark B. Richards. "13. Business Tenancies and the Landlord and Tenant Act 1954, Part II." In A Practical Approach to Conveyancing, 404–48. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/he/9780198838586.003.0013.

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This chapter considers the provisions of the Landlord and Tenant Act 1954, Part II, which regulates the ways in which business tenancies may be terminated and gives statutory protection to business tenants. Topics discussed include agreements to which the 1954 Act applies; requirement for ‘tenancy’ tenancies excluded from statutory protection; requirement for ‘occupation’ methods of termination under the 1954 Act; Section 40 notices; rules for service of notices; interim rent applications; landlord’s statutory grounds of opposition; tenant’s right to compensation for failure to obtain a new tenancy; and court order for new tenancy.
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Abbey, Robert M., and Mark B. Richards. "13. Business Tenancies and the Landlord and Tenant Act 1954, Part II." In A Practical Approach to Conveyancing, 404–48. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/he/9780198860372.003.0013.

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This chapter considers the provisions of the Landlord and Tenant Act 1954, Part II, which regulates the ways in which business tenancies may be terminated and gives statutory protection to business tenants. Topics discussed include agreements to which the 1954 Act applies; requirement for ‘tenancy’ tenancies excluded from statutory protection; requirement for ‘occupation’ methods of termination under the 1954 Act; Section 40 notices; rules for service of notices; interim rent applications; landlord’s statutory grounds of opposition; tenant’s right to compensation for failure to obtain a new tenancy; and court order for new tenancy.
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Holtzman, Benjamin. "From Renters to Owners." In The Long Crisis, 58–94. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190843700.003.0003.

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After numerous failed state-led initiatives to stem the exodus of middle-income residents in postwar New York, in the late 1960s landlords and major real estate associations proposed their own solution to increase homeownership and retain the middle class: converting rental housing into cooperatives. The middle-income tenants of this housing, however, initially widely rejected apartment ownership, preferring the security of rent-regulated housing. This set off a decade-long battle over the control and nature of moderate- and middle-income housing. This chapter traces how over the 1970s middle-income tenants came to embrace apartment ownership, a shift that pushed the housing stock toward market-rate condominiums and cooperatives and exacerbated the city’s mounting affordable housing crisis.
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Conference papers on the topic "Regulated rents"

1

Yang, Dahan, and Shuyan Wei. "A Study on Rent-seeking Behavior for Chinese Goverment Occupational Safety and Health Regulator Based on the Rent-seeking Theory." In 2016 International Conference on Humanity, Education and Social Science. Paris, France: Atlantis Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/ichess-16.2016.32.

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2

Tolstoguzov, O. "К ВОПРОСУ О ПОЛИТИЧЕСКОЙ ЭКОНОМИИ СОВРЕМЕННОГО ПРИРОДО- И ЗЕМЛЕПОЛЬЗОВАНИЯ." In Perspektivy social`no-ekonomicheskogo razvitiia prigranichnyh regionov 2019. Институт экономики - обособленное подразделение Федерального исследовательского центра "Карельский научный центр Российской академии наук", 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.36867/br.2019.31.26.063.

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В сообщении раскрыта природа экономической ренты, как фундаментальной характеристики экономического пространства. Показано, что в условиях современной либертарианской модели сформировались определенные баланс экстрактивных и инклюзивных институтов и соответствующая институциональная матрица, регулирующая порядок хозяйствования и природопользования. Следствиями этого являются дискриминация основной массы экономических агентов, присвоение транснациональными корпорациями основной массы капитала и деградация природы. The report presents the nature of economic rent as a fundamental characteristic of the economic space. It is shown that under the conditions of the modern Liberation model, a certain balance of extractive and inclusive institutions and corresponding institutional matrixes have been formed that regulate the economics and management of nature. The consequences of this are the discrimination of the bulk of economic agents, the appropriation by the transnational corporations of the bulk of capital and the degradation of nature.
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