Item #: 340-8628-04
ISBN: 1405118628
ISBN13: 978-1-4051-1862-0
Author: Alan W. Evans Publisher: Blackwell Publishing Format: Paperback
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The book draws together the economic literature relating to the supply of
land for development. The standard view appears to be that the owners of land
have no interest other than to allow their land to be used for the activity
which would yield the highest income. But in reality this is not so and the
book's aim is to demonstrate this, to set out the reasons and to show the
economic effects of the fact that landowners have other motives.
The book covers the supply of land for urban development and shows how land has
characteristics which differentiate it from other factors of production which
will also affect its supply for some uses, e.g. land is fixed in location and
its price and value are inseparable from where it is.
New light is cast on the market for land (by concentrating on the supply side),
and on land use planning (by taking an economic viewpoint). 272 pp.
Economics, Real Estate and the Supply of Land - Table of Contents:
Introduction: The Market for Land and Property
The supply of land
The demand for land
The development of a theory of the supply of land
Land Values, Rents and Demand
Introduction
Ricardian rent theory
Neoclassical rent theory
Ricardian theory remembered
Planning controls and rent theory
Hierarchical planning systems
Urban rent theory
Rents, economic and commercial
Summary and conclusion
Coping with Changes in Demand
Introduction
The extensive margins
The intensive margin
Capital longevity and the asymmetry of change
The process of change in the housing market
Summary and conclusions
How Efficient is the Property Market?
Introduction
The economic concept of efficiency
Efficient markets
The evidence
Tests of market efficiency
Conclusions
Market Inefficiency: Causes and Consequences
Introduction
Why the property market is imperfect and inefficient
Price determination and the theory of the core
The consequences
Conclusions
The Supply of Land for a Particular Use: Speculation and
Uncertainty
Introduction
Speculation
Uncertainty
Summary and conclusion
The Supply of Land for a Particular Use: Occupier Performances and
Residential Attachment
Introduction
Owner occupier attachment
Some empirical evidence
Summary and conclusions
The Ownership of Land
Introduction
Tenants, owner occupiers, and the supply of land
Ownership and change
Summary and conclusions
Land Ownership, Politics and Society
Introduction
Society and the ownership of land
Alternative forms of ownership and tenancy
A libertarian view
Summary
Ownership and Control: Monopoly
Introduction
Monopoly rents and wine production
Monopoly rents and shopping centers
Summary and conclusions
Ownership and Control: Minimum Rents
Introduction
Minimum rents
Minimum rents in an urban environment
Summary and conclusions
Information, Uncertainty and the Property Market
Introduction
Modelling the search for information
Searching for housing in practice
The housing market
The developer and land supply restriction
Summary and conclusions
Land Availability and Land Banking
Introduction
Land availability
Land banking by private firms
Public land banking
Summary and conclusions
Contiguity: Site Assembly
Introduction
A game theory approach
A question of time
Conclusion
Contiguity: Compulsory Purchase and the Scale of Development
Introduction
Compulsory purchase and the speed of acquisition
Scale economies, acquisition costs, and history
Summary and conclusion
Contiguity: Land Reallocation and the Price of Land