An equilibrium model of sorting in an urban housing market
An equilibrium model of sorting in an urban housing market
Rate this book:
About This Book
"This paper introduces an equilibrium framework for analyzing residential sorting, designed to take advantage of newly available restricted-access Census microdata. The framework adds an equilibrium concept to the discrete choice framework developed by McFadden (1973, 1978), permitting a more flexible characterization of preferences than has been possible in previously estimated sorting models. Using data on nearly a quarter of a million households residing in the San Francisco Bay Area in 1990, our estimates provide a precise characterization of preferences for many housing and neighborhood attributes, showing how demand for these attributes varies with a household's income, race, education, and family structure. We use the equilibrium model in combination with these estimates to explore the effects of an increase in income inequality, the findings indicating that much of the increased spending power of the rich is absorbed by higher housing prices"--National Bureau of Economic Research web site.
Buy This Book
As an Amazon Associate and Bookshop.org affiliate, BookOrb earns from qualifying purchases.
Write a Review
Sign in to write a review.
More by Patrick J. Bayer
A unified framework for measur
A unified framework for measuring preferences for schools and neighborhoods
Building criminal capital behi
Building criminal capital behind bars
Choice and competition in loca
Choice and competition in local education markets
Identifying individual and gro
Identifying individual and group effects in the presence of sorting
Migration and hedonic valuatio
Migration and hedonic valuation
Nonparametric identification a
Nonparametric identification and estimation in a generalized Roy model