Suchergebnisse
Filter
13 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
SSRN
Expressways, Market Access, and Industrial Development in China: Using Panel Instrumental Variables of Minimum Spanning Tree
In: MIT Center for Real Estate Research Paper No. 22/07
SSRN
SSRN
Resource-Exhausted City Transition to continue industrial development
In: China economic review, Band 67, S. 101623
ISSN: 1043-951X
SSRN
Working paper
SSRN
Working paper
Does ESG Guide Chinese Stock Investment with Economic Policy Uncertainty in Trade War
In: IREF-D-23-01096
SSRN
Suburban Housing Creation: Result of Transit Network Expansion in Central City
In: MIT Center for Real Estate Research Paper No. 23/15
SSRN
SSRN
How the Us-China Trade War Accelerated Urban Economic Growth and Environmental Progress in Northern Vietnam
In: NBER Working Paper No. w33126
SSRN
Risk Attitude and Housing Wealth Effect
SSRN
Working paper
The US-China Trade War: Quantify the Negative Shocks to Local Housing Markets and Land-Based Finance in Chinese Cities
In: MIT Center for Real Estate Research Paper No. 23/17
SSRN
Foreign liquidity to real estate market: Ripple effect and housing price dynamics
In: Urban studies, Band 52, Heft 1, S. 138-158
ISSN: 1360-063X
Globalisation enables foreign liquidity to access local property markets. This paper depicts a strong connection between foreigners' property acquisitions and regional housing price movements in Singapore. Testing structure breaks also illustrates a ripple effect of prices from the central city to suburbs. A structural vector autoregression incorporates these two observations. Impulse-response function and forecast-error variance decomposition show that central region's foreign-liquidity shocks can greatly impact housing price growth in not only the central region but also the non-central region where foreign buyers are inactive. The ripple effect of prices plays an important role. Non-central region's foreign-liquidity shocks, in contrast, have small effects on both regions. Impacts of foreign-liquidity shocks can reach the public-housing market, where foreigners' participation is prohibited. The findings are useful to policy makers who consider regulations of foreign home buyers as an instrument to stabilise housing markets.