Reflexes
>>>Environmental
services show heterogeneous capitalization patterns in housing and time
sub-markets.
>>>Volcanic
parks and beaches can lead to discounts or premiums through the distribution of
prices.
>>>Households
compensate for open space ecosystem services and development regulations.
>>>The
result of the exchange depends on the submarket in which we focus.
Summary
The
value of environmental services has been studied for decades in the hedonic
literature on housing prices. Numerous studies have found that services such as
marine, river and forest habitats, national and regional reserves, urban parks
or wetlands contribute positively to the formation of housing prices. Work is
scarce when considering the heterogeneity between sub-markets and time.
Auckland, the largest city in New Zealand, has a unique landscape with openspaces, waterways, coastal areas and volcanic features.
The local housing
market is highly segmented and the city has gone through a cycle of bursting,
recovery and boom in the last decade. This document incorporates heterogeneity
through sub-markets and time, and examines how the capitalization of services
affects housing prices. We built a data set of approximately 280,000 sales
transactions between 2000 and 2016 in Auckland and estimated hedonic models
based on regressions of unconditional quantiles. We found different patterns of
capitalization in housing sub-markets. Beaches can add price premiums of 5.1%
on houses at the upper end of the distribution, but also price discounts of
2.1% on houses at the lower end of the distribution. You can visit Dhaka City Election 2019.
We use a detailed
categorization of the parks and found that volcanic parks can add premiums for
houses at the 70% percentile and above the price distribution, but they also
imply values of price discounts for houses around the average price and
under. We argue that the different effects occur due to the compensations
between the regulations to protect the facilities and the ecosystem services
that they provide, conditioned to the specific aspects of the location of the
houses.
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