Housing and Infrastructure
Housing is an essential need. And rents, mortgages, and other costs tied to having a home often represent a family’s largest expense. Meanwhile, the infrastructure supporting our communities — transportation, communication systems, power grids — are integral to the economy by providing ways for people, information, and products to move around the world. SIEPR researchers examine how housing and infrastructure policies affect economic output and the way goods and services are allocated in local communities, throughout a country, and across the globe.
Keywords: housing, transportation, urban economics, infrastructure, broadband, telecom, migration
People in Housing and Infrastructure Research
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Associate Professor of Finance
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Associate Professor at the Stanford Doerr School of Sustainability
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Professor of Political Economy
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Research Scholar, Homelessness in CA
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Professor of Economics
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Professor of Economics
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Associate Professor of Economics
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Professor of Economics
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Professor of Poverty and Equality in Education
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Trione Visiting Professor
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Professor of Accounting, Emeritus
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Assistant Professor of Health Policy
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Professor of Economics
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Professor of Finance
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Charles R. Schwab Professor of Economics, Emeritus
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Assistant Professor of Economics
Related Publications
- Cook, C., Kreidieh, A., Vasserman, S., Allcott, H., Arora, N., van Sambeek, F., Tomkins, A., & Turkel, E. (2025). The Short-Run Effects of Congestion Pricing in New York City. Working Paper.
- Redding, S. (2025). Evaluating Transport Improvements in Spatial Equilibrium. Working Paper.
- Redding, S. (2024). Quantitative Urban Economics. Working Paper.
Related News
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The deeper reason for banking’s retreat
The Economist credits research by SIEPR's Greg Buchak in describing how regulatory red tape only partially explains commercial banking's retreat from traditional lending.
July 31, 2025
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A new tool for sizing up the US economy
The Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research and MIT have developed a tool that makes it easier for journalists, policymakers and others to spot trends in the U.S. economy.
June 17, 2025
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