Construction and Application of Property Price Indices

Construction and Application of Property Price Indices
Author: Anthony Owusu-Ansah
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 210
Release: 2018-07-11
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 1351591002

The importance of house prices to households, real estate developers, banks and policy-makers cannot be overemphasised. House price changes affect consumer spending and business investment patterns, which in turn affect the wider macro economy and the entire business cycle. Measuring and understanding house prices is therefore essential to a functioning economy, but researchers continue to disagree on the best methodological approach for constructing real estate indices. This book argues the need for more accurate house price indices, outlines the various methods used to construct indices and discusses the existing house price indices around the globe. It shows how the raw data of property transactions can be prepared for the purpose of constructing indices, discusses various applications of property price indices and empirically demonstrates how the index numbers can be used to model the supply of new houses and to estimate the price elasticity of supply. Essential reading for economists, real estate professionals and researchers, and policy-makers.

House Price Indices

House Price Indices
Author: Thomas G. Thibodeau
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages: 266
Release: 1997-03-31
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 9780792398837

This book contains a special issue of the Journal of Real Estate Finance and Economics, comprising thirteen articles on house price measurement. These articles address the various procedures used to compute cross-sectional or temporal house price indices. Specifically, these articles contain research that: (1) evaluates hedonic, repeat sales, or hybrid approaches to constructing house price indices; (2) evaluates alternative sources of data on house prices and corresponding housing characteristics; (3) identifies the most influential land, structural, neighborhood, and proximity determinants of house prices (and associated changes in house prices); (4) provides a methodology for identifying housing market segments; (5) incorporates spatial autocorrelation in house price indices; and (6) provides more accurate estimates of the variance in house prices.

Spon's Construction Cost and Price Indices Handbook

Spon's Construction Cost and Price Indices Handbook
Author: M C Fleming
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 383
Release: 1991-02-21
Genre: Technology & Engineering
ISBN: 1482267012

This unique handbook collects together a comprehensive and up-to-date range of indices measuring construction costs and price movements. The authors give guidance on the use of the data making this an essential aid to accurate estimating, as well as examples of how the costs were compiled.

Handbook on Residential Property Price Indices

Handbook on Residential Property Price Indices
Author: OECD
Publisher: OECD Publishing
Total Pages: 186
Release: 2013-04-22
Genre:
ISBN: 9264197184

This Handbook provides, for the first time, comprehensive guidelines for the compilation of Residential Property Price Indexes and explains in depth the methods and best practices used to calculate an RPPI.

Spon's Construction Cost and Price Indices Handbook

Spon's Construction Cost and Price Indices Handbook
Author: M C Fleming
Publisher: CRC Press
Total Pages: 392
Release: 1991-02-21
Genre: Technology & Engineering
ISBN: 9780419153306

This unique handbook collects together a comprehensive and up-to-date range of indices measuring construction costs and price movements. The authors give guidance on the use of the data making this an essential aid to accurate estimating.

Property Price Index

Property Price Index
Author: W. Erwin Diewert
Publisher: Springer
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2020-01-25
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 9784431559405

This book answers the question of how exactly property price indexes should be constructed. The formation and collapse of property bubbles has had a profound impact on the economic administration of many nations. The property price bubble that began around the mid-1980s in Japan has been called the 20th century's biggest bubble. In its aftermath, the country faced a period of long-term economic stagnation dubbed the "lost decade." Sweden and the United States have also faced collapses of property bubbles in the 20th and early 21st centuries, respectively. It has been pointed out that the "information gap" that existed between policy-making authorities and the property (including housing) and financial markets was a problem. In 2009, the IMF proposed the creation of a housing price index to the G20 in order to fill this information gap, and the proposal was adopted. Furthermore, in 2011, it was suggested that the next economic crisis would be caused by a bubble in commercial property prices, and it was decided to create a commercial property index as well. This book provides practical examples of how the theory of property price indexes can be applied to the issues of property as a non-homogenous good and a technological and environmental change.

Index Construction Methodologies and Their Implications on Real Estate Prices

Index Construction Methodologies and Their Implications on Real Estate Prices
Author: Lukas Ebner
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 2019
Genre:
ISBN:

This thesis assesses the feasibility of developing a reliable real estate price index using unprecedented transaction-based data on Swiss investment real estate for the period between 1940 and 2017. Multiple different methodological approaches are employed and scrutinised to assess their suitability for the computation of hedonic property price indices. Despite the broad availability and the extensive research on real estate indices, most benchmarks lack transparency as they are deficient in a detailed definition and description of the underlying construction methodology. As such, acclaimed price indices may show significantly diverging price dynamics arising - inter alia - from varying methodical approaches. This thesis establishes an extensive number of property indices and subsequently compares results with the most widely-known indices in the Swiss real estate environment. A secondary objective of this thesis is the integration of macroeconomic data to observe possible co-movements in price dynamics and to assess their contribution to the established property price index. By means of a principal component analysis, I compute an index that correctly captures the relative contribution of twenty-two "stand-alone" indices. Yet demonstrating similar price dynamics, computed indices vary substantially in magnitude. The results confirm the initial notion that differences among property indices may in fact result from inconsistencies in the underlying methodological approaches. The final index is in line with other well recognized Swiss indices, displaying an annual mean growth rate of 2.47% and a standard deviation of 0.07, which is slightly below the average value of its peers over the observed timeframe. Further, I find certain lagged macroeconomic factors to be significantly associated with price trends in the Swiss property asset market.

A Flexible Method of House Price Index Construction Using Repeat-Sales Aggregates

A Flexible Method of House Price Index Construction Using Repeat-Sales Aggregates
Author: William D. Larson
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2022
Genre:
ISBN:

The major issue which we address in this paper is the one-size-fits-all nature of the typical city-level house price index. In this vein, we make two contributions. First, we develop a new algorithm to ensure feasible estimation of geographically granular repeat-sales house price indices in cases of low transactions counts. This facilitates the estimation of a balanced panel of 63,122 Census tract-level repeat-sales house price indices (2010 definitions) at an annual frequency between 1989 and 2021, which we release alongside this paper. Second, we use these indices to estimate city-level house price indices that are robust to heterogeneous submarket appreciation and non-random sampling, two issues that confound classic approaches. Numerical simulations show this algorithm uncovers population indices even when house prices, quantities, and transaction sampling vary across locations and over time. This approach can be used in a flexible manner to calculate canonical price indices such as Lowe and Laspeyres, and more tailored summary indices on a variety of topics, including collateral valuation, climate risk assessment, or tracking changes to minority housing wealth over time.