Thursday, 30 April 2026

A note of theory-decomposing on Harvey's spatiotemporal fix theory: for Housing Studies students

A note of theory-decomposing on Harvey's spatiotemporal fix theory: for Housing Studies students

 

Highlight 4 main ideas of David Harvey's Spatiotemporal Fix Theory and describe 2 claims of it in terms of Toulmin's model of arguments.

David Harvey’s spatiotemporal fix can be understood through four main ideas: capitalism’s crises are driven by surplus capital and surplus labor; these surpluses are temporarily absorbed by moving investment across space; crises are also delayed by stretching time through credit, debt, and long-term commitments; and these “fixes” are only temporary, because they eventually create new contradictions and larger crises.

Four main ideas

·        Surplus absorption. The theory starts from the problem of overaccumulation: too much capital and too much labor cannot be profitably used in one place or at one time.

·        Spatial displacement. Capital seeks relief by shifting investment into new regions, infrastructure, or built environments, which relocates the crisis instead of removing it.

·        Temporal deferment. Capital also postpones crisis by using debt, long-term projects, and delayed returns, buying time before contradictions reappear.

·        Temporary and self-defeating solution. The fix is unstable: it resolves immediate pressure but later intensifies the very crisis tendencies it was meant to manage.

Two claims in Toulmin form

Claim 1: Capitalism can delay crisis by reorganizing space and time.

·        Claim: Spatiotemporal shifts allow capitalism to postpone crisis rather than eliminate it.

·        Grounds: Harvey links the concept to surplus capital and surplus labor that are redirected into new places and longer time horizons.

·        Warrant: If surplus cannot be absorbed profitably in the present location or moment, moving it elsewhere or into the future can temporarily restore accumulation.

·        Backing: Harvey’s broader argument about spatial fix and time-space compression supports this mechanism.

·        Qualifier: This works only temporarily.

Claim 2: Every fix creates new contradictions.

·        Claim: Spatiotemporal fixes eventually deepen capitalism’s instability.

·        Grounds: The literature on Harvey’s theory says each fix defers crisis but then intensifies crisis tendencies and their effects.

·        Warrant: A solution that depends on new investment, new geography, or more debt creates new vulnerabilities and limits for future accumulation.

·        Backing: Harvey’s Marxist framework treats capitalist crisis as recurrent and internally generated, not as a one-time problem.

·        Qualifier: The intensification is expected over time, not necessarily immediately.

Academic phrasing

A concise way to write this in an MBA or social science assignment is:

“Harvey’s spatiotemporal fix explains how capitalism manages crisis by shifting accumulation across space and deferring it across time, but these moves only postpone contradiction and eventually reproduce deeper instability”.

 

Try to illustrate the ideas a bit more in the context of the contemporary history of the Hong Kong housing market.

Hong Kong's housing market crisis offers a clear lens for Harvey's spatiotemporal fix theory, where land scarcity and capital overaccumulation drive temporary resolutions through spatial expansion and temporal deferral. These fixes absorb surplus capital into real estate but exacerbate affordability issues over time.

Surplus Absorption in HK Housing

Capital overaccumulation in Hong Kong funnels surplus into property development, with private housing prices rising for 27 months amid population growth and land limits. Public housing wait times exceed five years as low-income groups compete for scarce units, locking capital in high-rises and infrastructure.

Spatial Displacement

Post-1997 Asian Financial Crisis and 2008 Global Crisis, developers pursued spatial fixes via land reclamation (e.g., Lantau Tomorrow) and New Territories expansion, displacing surplus capital outward. Kowloon public estates cluster in Wong Tai Sin and Kwun Tong, using "residual" lower-rent sites for mass housing, but this spreads crisis to suburbs.

Temporal Deferment

Credit and long-term projects like MTR-linked developments and subsidized Home Ownership Scheme defer crisis by stretching turnover times. Government land sales and REITs (e.g., Link REIT) financialize housing, validating investments through future rents despite inelastic supply.

Temporary Fixes

These measures intensify contradictions: reclamation harms ecosystems, suburban builds increase commutes, and prices remain unaffordable (elasticity ~0.009). Urban renewal in Kowloon pushes more public housing into decaying areas, risking poverty concentration without resolving core overaccumulation.

 

Primary References

·        Harvey, D., 2001. Spaces of capital: towards a critical geography. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.

·        Jessop, B., 2006. Spatial fixes, temporal fixes and spatio-temporal fixes. In: David Harvey: a critical reader. Oxford: Blackwell, pp. 142-166.



** theory-decomposing is a literature review technique.



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Wednesday, 29 April 2026

A note of theory-decomposing on the housing deficit theory: for Housing Studies students

A note of theory-decomposing on the housing deficit theory: for Housing Studies students (a literature review technique)


 

Highlight 5 main ideas of Earl W. Morris & Mary Winter's housing deficit theory and 2 main claims of it in terms of Toulmin's model of arguments.

Earl W. Morris and Mary Winter’s housing deficit theory, often termed the "housing adjustment model," explains how households evaluate their residential conditions through a normative lens.

Main Ideas of Housing Deficit Theory

1.    Normative Evaluation: Households measure their current living conditions against both culturally derived societal norms and their own unique family-level norms regarding space, tenure, structure type, quality, expenditure, and neighborhood.

2.    Definition of Deficits: A "housing deficit" arises when there is a measurable incongruity between a household's actual housing situation and these established norms, regardless of whether the deviation is positive (too much) or negative (too little).

3.    Residential Dissatisfaction: The emergence of a normative deficit acts as a primary catalyst for residential dissatisfaction, creating a psychological state of discomfort for the family.

4.    Adjustment Processes: In response to dissatisfaction, households are motivated to pursue corrective actions, which may include residential mobility (moving), adaptation (altering the dwelling), or simply accepting the deficit.

5.    Structural Constraints: The theory acknowledges that a household's ability to resolve deficits is frequently limited by external constraints, such as insufficient financial resources, market availability, and systemic discrimination.

Claims in Toulmin's Model

When analyzed through Stephen Toulmin’s model of argumentation—which breaks arguments into components like data, claims, and warrants—the theory posits the following primary arguments:

·        The Behavioral Motivation Claim: "Housing deficits necessitate a behavioral change (adjustment or movement) in the household." In this structure, the data is the presence of a normative deficit, the warrant (the logical bridge) is the assumption that families are inherently motivated to minimize residential dissatisfaction, and the claim is the resulting behavioral response.

·        The Normative Satisfaction Claim: "Residential satisfaction is fundamentally a function of meeting normative standards." Here, the data consists of measured housing attributes, the warrant is the premise that individuals judge their environment against internal and cultural benchmarks, and the claim asserts that satisfaction is not merely an objective measure, but a relative, normative one.

 

Illustrate the 5 ideas a bit more with regard to the following Housing Studies dissertation theme: "to evaluate the residential satisfaction of gen x living in the public housing estate in Wong Tai Sin in 2025-2026"

For your study focusing on married Gen X residents in Wong Tai Sin, the housing deficit theory provides a robust framework to explain how their specific marital stage and demographic profile shape their housing experience.

Applying Theory to Married Gen X in Wong Tai Sin

·        Normative Evaluation: Married Gen Xers often manage dual-generational responsibilities (sandwich generation), leading to specific norms regarding the need for privacy, multiple bedrooms for family members, and accessible communal space. You can evaluate how these marital and household norms contrast with the legacy designs of older Wong Tai Sin blocks.

·        Definition of Deficits: A deficit for this group may manifest as "spatial mismatch," where the existing floor plan of a public housing unit fails to provide a dedicated space for a married couple while simultaneously accommodating aging parents or children. You would document how married residents define these specific deficits relative to their life-cycle stage.

·        Residential Dissatisfaction: You can hypothesize that marital status amplifies the intensity of dissatisfaction when deficits arise; for example, the perceived lack of private, intimate space within the apartment may cause greater psychological distress for a married couple compared to a single-person household.

·        Adjustment Processes: Because married Gen Xers in Wong Tai Sin are often rooted in their community, they may prioritize "adaptation" over "mobility". Your research can investigate if they utilize subtle, unauthorized spatial adjustments (e.g., partitioning, multifunctional furniture) to mitigate deficits because moving out of a subsidized estate is financially non-viable.

·        Structural Constraints: In the Hong Kong context, you should emphasize that the "rules" of public housing (tenancy regulations, strict renovation guidelines) act as a structural barrier preventing married Gen X couples from resolving their housing deficits, even when they possess the financial capacity to make improvements.

Summary Table for Dissertation Framing

Concept

Application for Married Gen X Residents

Concept

Application for Married Gen X Residents

Normative Evaluation

Benchmarking space and privacy against the needs of a married couple caring for multiple generations.

Definition of Deficits

Identifying gaps between current unit design and the requirement for multi-functional family usage.

Residential Dissatisfaction

Measuring how marital status correlates with specific stressors derived from physical space limitations.

Adjustment Processes

Analyzing in-situ modifications or community-based workarounds versus the feasibility of relocation .

Structural Constraints

Evaluating how housing policy and space rigidities institutionalize the housing deficits of this demographic.

 

 

References

Morris, E.W. and Winter, M. (1975) ‘A theory of family housing adjustment’, Journal of Marriage and Family, 37(1), pp. 79–88.

Morris, E.W. and Winter, M. (1978) Housing, family, and society. New York: John Wiley & Sons.

 

** theory-decomposing is a literature review technique.



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A note of theory-decomposing on Halbesleben's Conservation of Resources (COR) theory: for MBA students

A note of theory-decomposing on Halbesleben's Conservation of Resources (COR) theory: for MBA students



Highlight 5 main ideas of Jonathon R. B. Halbesleben's Conservation of Resources (COR) theory and describe 2 claims of it in terms of Toulmin's model of argument.

Conservation of Resources (COR) theory holds that people are motivated to obtain, protect, and build valued resources, and that stress arises mainly when those resources are threatened or lost. In a Toulmin-style argument, the theory can be broken into a claim, supporting data, warrants, and backing; below are five core ideas and two example claims expressed that way.

Five main ideas

1.    People try to conserve what they value.
COR’s basic premise is that individuals strive to retain, protect, and foster resources they see as important.

2.    Resource loss matters more than resource gain.
Loss is usually more psychologically powerful than an equivalent gain, so avoiding loss often drives behavior more strongly than pursuing gain.

3.    People invest resources to prevent future loss.
Time, effort, money, and energy are often spent to shield existing resources, recover lost ones, or create new ones.

4.    Resources tend to cluster and build on each other.
People with more resources are better positioned to gain more, while those with fewer resources are more vulnerable to further loss.

5.    Stress can spiral through loss cycles.
An initial loss can trigger further losses because depleted people have fewer resources left to cope, which can create a downward spiral.

Two Toulmin-style claims

Claim 1: Resource loss is more stressful than resource gain is satisfying.

·        Claim: A loss hurts more than an equal gain helps.

·        Data: COR states that resource loss is disproportionately more salient than resource gain.

·        Warrant: If people react more strongly to loss than gain, then stress responses will be driven more by loss than by benefit.

·        Backing: COR’s first principle is the primacy of loss, which directly supports this asymmetry.

Claim 2: People must spend resources to protect and rebuild resources.

·        Claim: To avoid future loss or regain what was lost, people need to invest some of their remaining resources.

·        Data: COR’s resource investment principle says people invest resources to protect against loss, recover from loss, and gain resources.

·        Warrant: Protection and recovery are not cost-free; action requires an input of time, energy, money, or skill.

·        Backing: COR theory explains coping as resource allocation aimed at preserving what remains and building a new resource base.

 

Illustrate the five ideas a bit more with regard to the MBA research theme of "an evaluation of the Hong Kong retail sector's resilience in the face of tough competitive environment".

Using Halbesleben’s streamlining of Conservation of Resources (COR) theory, you can frame your MBA research on Hong Kong retail resilience as a story about how firms try to protect, invest, and rebuild four key resource pools: financial capital, customer relationships, human capital, and brand/space advantages. Below are the five COR ideas, each briefly illustrated around Hong Kong retailers facing e‑commerce competition, high rents, and shifting tourism.


1. People try to conserve what they value

Retailers cling to resources they see as core to survival, such as prime‑location bricks‑and‑mortar shops, loyal customer bases, and stable supplier contracts. In Hong Kong, even when sales dip, many local chains resist closing iconic stores because the physical presence is seen as a long‑term brand asset, not just a cost center.


2. Resource loss matters more than resource gain

A sharp drop in tourist inflows or a sudden rent rise can trigger disproportionate stress compared with a similar‑size gain from a successful promotion. For example, a 10% fall in foot traffic from mainland e‑commerce leakage feels more threatening than a 10% lift from a discount campaign, pushing SME retailers toward defensive retrenchment rather than patient differentiation.


3. People invest resources to prevent future loss

To avoid being squeezed by platforms like JD.com or Alibaba, many Hong Kong retailers invest scarce resources—working capital, staff time, and ICT budgets—into digital channels, loyalty programs, or omnichannel services. For instance, a mid‑sized fashion retailer might divert funds from new store openings to build a mobile app and click‑and‑collect, betting that this digital “buffer” will protect market share over time.


4. Resources tend to cluster and build on each other

Firms with stronger balance sheets, better locations, and higher brand equity are better able to invest in automation, data analytics, and experiential concepts, which further widen the gap with weaker players. In Hong Kong, a leading department store can afford experiential pop‑ups and AI‑driven personalization, while a small boutique may struggle simply to keep lights on, accelerating a resource‑rich versus resource‑poor divide.


5. Stress can spiral through loss cycles

Once a retailer loses key resources—such as a prime lease, a loyal customer cohort, or a reliable staff team—its remaining resources are harder to protect, leading to a downward spiral. A shop in Causeway Bay that loses foot traffic because of online competition may cut staff hours, which reduces service quality, further repelling in‑store customers and ultimately forcing closure, even if the underlying brand has potential.


How this fits your MBA research theme

You can position your “evaluation of Hong Kong retail resilience” as an analysis of how different firms manage COR‑style resource dynamics: which ones successfully protect and recombine resources (e.g., blending offline experience with digital efficiency), and which slide into loss spirals under pricing pressure, rent volatility, and mainland e‑commerce encroachment. This helps turn resilience from a vague “we’ll survive” notion into a concrete set of observable resource‑saving, resource‑investing, and resource‑rebuilding strategies.

 

References

1.    Hobfoll, S.E. (2001) ‘The investment model: a positive psychological theory of stress’, in The encyclopedia of stress, 2nd edn., vol. 1. Oxford: Academic Press, pp. 562–567.
(This is the classic, concise statement of COR used in many management and stress chapters.)

2.    Hobfoll, S.E. (2011) ‘Conservation of resources theory: bridges between levels of analysis and the resilience process’, Journal of Vocational Behavior, 79(1), pp. 1–17.
(Focuses explicitly on resilience and how COR operates across individual, team, and organizational levels.)

3.    Halbesleben, J.R.B., Neveu, J.P., Paustian‑Underdahl, S.C. and Westman, M. (2014) ‘Getting to the COR: understanding the role of resources in conservation of resources theory’, Journal of Organizational Behavior, 35(S1), pp. S1–S12.
(A key “streamlining” article that clarifies principles and resources in COR, very useful for OB/work‑stress and resilience applications.)



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        A collection of blog notes on using chatgpt for research purpose.