The Effect of Municipal Services and Local Taxes on Housing Values
This paper presents an economic model which casts the "Tiebout Hypothesis" in a Von Thumen type model of spatial equilibrium and considers the effect of differential provision of municipal services on household utility levels and housing prices in a politically fragmented urban area. Also in the context of this model three alternative methods of financing municipal services are examined. The article suggests that different levels of municipal services may cause spatial disequilibrium in an urban area, and as households move within the urban area to maximize their utility, they bid up (or down) the price of housing to the extent that their consumer's surplus is capitalized in housing values. Thus, the resultant urban rent gradient may be "kinked" or discontinuous. This paper also presents empirical findings examining the relationship between housing values and several municipal services. Copyright American Real Estate and Urban Economics Association.
Year of publication: |
1979
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Authors: | Kohlhepp, Daniel B. ; Ingene, Charles A. |
Published in: |
Real Estate Economics. - American Real Estate and Urban Economics Association - AREUEA. - Vol. 7.1979, 3, p. 318-343
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Publisher: |
American Real Estate and Urban Economics Association - AREUEA |
Saved in:
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