Metropolitan Land Values

David Albouy, Gabriel Ehrlich, Minchul Shin

The Review of Economics and Statistics (2018) 100 (3): 454–466

Abstract:

We estimate the first cross-sectional index of transaction-based land values for every U.S. metropolitan area. The index accounts for geographic selection and incorporates novel shrinkage methods using a prior belief based on urban economic theory. Land values at the city center increase with city size, as do land-value gradients; both are highly variable across cities. Urban land values are estimated at more than two times GDP in 2006. These estimates are higher and less volatile than estimates from residual (total - structure) methods. Five urban agglomerations account for 48% of all urban land value in the United States.

Previous
Previous

Housing Productivity and the Social Cost of Land-Use Restrictions

Next
Next

What Are Cities Worth? Land Rents, Local Productivity, and the Total Value of Amenities