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)