Financiarización y gentrificación transnacional

Raíces de un proceso de transformación urbana en Cuenca, Ecuador

authored by
Matthew Hayes, Daniela Celleri
Abstract

The financialization of housing is central to understanding urban development and the processes of transnational gentrification occurring in the Global South. The city of Cuenca offers an emble-matic case, in which transnational investment has induced new processes of urbanization, much of it intended to attract higher-income consumers from the Global North. The transformation of its real estate market from a local one into a transnational one is led partly by Ecuadorian migration to the Global North, but it is also accompanied by North-South lifestyle migration. Both groups have helped to propel real estate construction, especially of new, dense, high-rise condos. The article argues that Ecuador’s attempt to boost its construction sector and expand mortgage credit through securitization of debts has helped to attract transnational pools of migrant wor-kers’ savings to the built environment of its cities—notably Cuenca. Yet the benefits of urban housing investment are not shared by lower-income workers there, who continue to lack access to affordable housing.

Organisation(s)
Sociology Department
External Organisation(s)
St. Thomas University (STU)
Type
Article
Journal
SCRIPTA NOVA
Volume
27
Pages
139-161
No. of pages
23
ISSN
1138-9788
Publication date
15.07.2023
Publication status
Published
Peer reviewed
Yes
ASJC Scopus subject areas
Geography, Planning and Development
Sustainable Development Goals
SDG 11 - Sustainable Cities and Communities
Electronic version(s)
https://doi.org/10.1344/sn2023.27.40341 (Access: Open)