The price and quantity of land by legal form of organization in the United States
I develop estimates of the value, price and quantity of land owned by each of the major legal forms of organization in the United States. "Land" stands for all aspects of a developed property (location, amenities, option value, etc.) such that the market value of the property is worth more than the replacement cost of the structures. The estimates I produce are necessary ingredients in the production of a fully integrated set of economic accounts for the United States as described by Jorgenson and Landefeld (Jorgenson, Dale W., Landefeld, J. Steven, 2006. Blueprint for Expanded and Integrated U.S. Accounts - Review, Assessment, and Next Steps. In: Jorgenson, Dale W., Landefeld, J. Steven, Nordhaus, William D. (Eds.), A New Architecture for the U.S. National Accounts. The University of Chicago Press). The estimates also contribute to our understanding of the behavior of the aggregate price of land. A key result of this paper is that the price of land in residential use historically has very different patterns than the price of land in commercial use.
Year of publication: |
2009
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Authors: | Davis, Morris A. |
Published in: |
Regional Science and Urban Economics. - Elsevier, ISSN 0166-0462. - Vol. 39.2009, 3, p. 350-359
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Publisher: |
Elsevier |
Keywords: | Land Land value Land price Residential land Commercial land Flow of funds |
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