[Fixer Upper]…is one of the clearest overviews of America’s housing policy failures and just its housing policies that you’ll find. But reading it, a much deeper argument struck me throughout. This is very much a book about when democracy works and when it fails… what [Schuetz] is saying is that this system, what we often imagine to be the essence of democracy, it is failing and it is failing worst in the places where it often looks to be operating best. It’s a pretty profound set of questions, not just for liberals, but for anybody who thinks about political systems, to grapple with.
— Ezra Klein interviews Jenny Schuetz on The New York Times’ The Ezra Klein Show podcast
This book offers a well-written, well-researched, and insightful analysis of what is not working in housing and land use policies in the United States and how to fix them.
— Enrico Moretti, Michael Peevey and Donald Vial Professor of Economics, University of California, Berkeley
Housing affordability is one of the most important problems facing American families. Using an economic lens, Fixer-Upper presents a clear and compelling diagnosis of today’s housing ills and illuminates the path forward to reach the nation’s goal of decent and affordable homes and strong communities for all.
— Chris Herbert, managing director, Harvard Joint Center for Housing Studies
If you think housing policy is dry and technocratic, Fixer-Upper will convince you otherwise. Jenny Schuetz clearly and succinctly explains how current policies—from local zoning to federal tax policy—contribute to some of the country’s most urgent economic and social problems. Her proposed solutions are both practical and provocative—worthy of serious debate.
— Sara Bronin, professor, Cornell University, and founder, DesegregateCT
This pithy treatise examines the structural inequities in housing, makes a compelling ethical and economic argument that systemic change benefits everyone, and—though she is under no illusion that it will be easy—points the way forward.
— Journal of the American Planning Association
While the scope of the book is both broad and incisive, the overall ambition is charged with moral imperative. The term fixer-upper is usually deployed as a marketing tool for a single unit of housing. In Schuetz’s hands, Fixer-Upper is a playbook for a sustainable, just, and humane system
— Planetizen
Fixer-Upper offers a good introduction to the economic forces that underlie that problem, and the graduate course is all there in the footnotes. Jenny Schuetz writes in an accessible, common-language style even when she is covering abstruse economic theories.
— Anthony J. Filipovitch; Journal of Urban Affairs
The ongoing COVID-19 pandemic and the [2020] recession…have (yet again) shown that the U.S. housing system is broken and needs to be fixed, as evidenced by the millions of applications to state and local rent relief programs, tens of thousands of evictions and ensuing homelessness, and miles-long lines in front of food banks. Fixer-Upper: How to Repair America’s Broken Housing Systems presents solutions that should be implemented at the federal, state, and local levels.
— Katrin B. Anacker, George Mason’s Schar School of Policy and Government; Journal of Urban Affairs
Fixer-Upper will be a useful tool for mobilizing the change it advocates. Schuetz’s accessible writing style echoes the book’s content. She wrangles a seemingly intractable issue into a cogent brief, written in plain, disciplined language… a phenomenal introduction for government officials at all levels, civic leaders, students, and the broader public.
— Shayna Goldsmith; Journal of the American Planning Association
Fixer-Upper, the excellent new book from Dr. Jenny Schuetz at Brookings Metro, might be the closest thing there is to a restatement of the current progressively infused “Yes in My Back Yard” (YIMBY) housing movement.... Fixer-Upper is the book I would hand a to a friend who does not study housing but wants to learn. If it becomes a guidebook to the next housing movement, it will not be because Fixer-Upper has all the answers, but because it simultaneously gives the novice a chance to see what is at stake, and the scholar a center around which a whole host of ideas can turn.
— Journal of Affordable Housing