In Housing the New Russia, Jane R. Zavisca examines Russia's attempts to transition from a socialist vision of housing, in which the government promised a separate, state-owned apartment for every family, to a market-based and mortgage-dependent model of home ownership. In 1992, the post-Soviet Russian government signed an agreement with the United States to create the Russian housing market. The vision of an American-style market guided housing policy over the next two decades. Privatization gave socialist housing to existing occupants, creating a nation of homeowners overnight. New financial institutions, modeled on the American mortgage system, laid the foundation for a market. Next the state tried to stimulate mortgages—and reverse the declining birth rate, another major concern—by subsidizing loans for young families. Imported housing institutions, however, failed to resonate with local conceptions of ownership, property, and rights. Most Russians reject mortgages, which they call "debt bondage," as an unjust "overpayment" for a good they consider to be a basic right. Instead of stimulating homeownership, privatization, combined with high prices and limited credit, created a system of "property without markets." Frustrated aspirations and unjustified inequality led most Russians to call for a government-controlled housing market. Under the Soviet system, residents retained lifelong tenancy rights, perceiving the apartments they inhabited as their own. In the wake of privatization, young Russians can no longer count on the state to provide their house, nor can they afford to buy a home with wages, forcing many to live with extended family well into adulthood. Zavisca shows that the contradictions of housing policy are a significant factor in Russia's falling birth rates and the apparent failure of its pronatalist policies. These consequences further stack the deck against the likelihood that an affordable housing market will take off in the near future.
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Jane R. Zavisca examines Russia's attempts to transition from a socialist vision of housing, in which the government promised a separate, state-owned apartment for every family, to a market-based and mortgage-dependent model of home ownership.
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Introduction: A Painful QuestionPart I: The Development of the Post-Soviet Housing Regime1. The Soviet Promise: A Separate Apartment for Every Family 2. Transplant Failure: The American Housing Model in Russia 3. Maternity Capitalism: Grafting Pronatalism onto Housing Policy 4. Property without Markets: Who Got What as Markets FailedPart II: The Meaning of Housing in the New Russia5. Disappointed Dreams: Distributive Injustice in the New Housing Order 6. Mobility Strategies: Searching for the Separate Apartment 7. Rooms of Their Own: How Housing Affects Family Size 8. Children Are Not Capital: Ambivalence about Pronatalist Housing Policies 9. To Owe Is Not to Own: Why Russians Reject MortgagesConclusion: A Market That Could Not EmergeAppendix: Characteristics of Interviewees Cited in TextNotes Works Cited Index
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[Understanding] mortgages in Russia, argues Jane Zavisca in her new book Housing the New Russia, is crucial not only for understanding postsocialist Russia..Housing the New Russia engages many of the standard issues in the literature on housing and offers a fresh look at them.. [It] leaves readers better informed about the established and emerging mortgage markets and more critical about the American Dream, which 'suddenly seems more fraught with moral hazard' (p. 199).
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Housing the New Russia is a well-written and important book on a timely subject, the U.S.-sponsored, Russian-backed program to establish a mortgage-based housing market in the aftermath of the Soviet collapse. By explaining the complex reasons Russians rejected the idea of mortgages, Jane R. Zavisca's analysis of the housing reform project offers a highly significant case study of the outcomes of American aid approaches to 'fixing’ post-Soviet societies.
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780801477379
Publisert
2012
Utgiver
Vendor
Cornell University Press
Vekt
454 gr
Høyde
235 mm
Bredde
155 mm
Dybde
16 mm
Aldersnivå
01, UP, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet

Forfatter

Biographical note

Jane R. Zavisca is Assistant Professor of Sociology at the University of Arizona.