« Back to Results
Hilton Atlanta, 215
Hosted By:
American Real Estate and Urban Economics Association
difference between casual and commercial short-term rental operators is important
but seldom discussed. Short-term rental platforms help casual operators earn extra
income, bringing benefits to local residents. On the contrary, commercial operators
impose burdens on local residents, because they decrease the long-term rental supply,
further exacerbating the housing affordability issue. In order to understand which
neighborhoods in New York City are experiencing such benefits and burdens of short-
term rental use, this paper uses data from Inside Airbnb, American Community Survey
(ACS), and Department of City Planning (PLUTO), and finds within central areas,
neighborhoods with lower long-term rents bear greater burdens from commercial short-
term rental use. In addition, neighborhoods with higher black and Hispanic population
share less benefits from casual short-term rental use.
Housing, House Prices, and Airbnb
Paper Session
Saturday, Jan. 5, 2019 8:00 AM - 10:00 AM
- Chair: Andra Ghent, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Can Landlords be Paid to Stop Avoiding Voucher Tenants?
Abstract
Despite being eligible for use in any neighborhood, housing choice vouchers tend to be redeemed in low opportunity neighborhoods. This paper investigates whether landlord behavior contributes to this outcome by studying the recent expansion of neighborhood-based voucher limits in Washington, DC. We conduct two waves of a correspondence experiment, one before and one after the expansion. Landlords heavily penalize tenants who indicate a desire to pay by voucher. The voucher penalty is larger in high rent neighborhoods, pushing voucher tenants to low rent neighborhoods. We find no evidence that indexing rents to small areas affects landlord acceptance of voucher tenants or ultimate lease-up locations in an economically significant way. Moving to neighborhood-based rent limits does increase the likelihood that any voucher tenants live in a high-rent tract, but these effects are small.On the Strategic Timing of Sales by Real Estate Developers- To Wait or To Presell?
Abstract
In timing property listings, real estate developers can exercise the “option to wait” or “option to presell” to mitigate price uncertainty risk. In this study, we study the effectiveness of both strategies under a unified framework. We test our hypotheses using residential development data from Hong Kong between 1995 and 2015. Empirical evidence shows that when the presale option is unavailable, developers tend to adopt the waiting strategy when facing price uncertainty risk. Conversely, when a presale option is available, developers will accelerate sales when price volatility is high. Moreover, the effectiveness of the presale option depends substantially on government restrictions. Our approach facilitates the identification of the net effect of either tool and provides an opportunity to unify conflicting findings in the literature.Which Neighborhood Joins the Sharing Economy and Why? - The Case of the Short-term Rental Market in New York City
Abstract
As the sharing economy has emerged, the short-term rental market has grown. Thedifference between casual and commercial short-term rental operators is important
but seldom discussed. Short-term rental platforms help casual operators earn extra
income, bringing benefits to local residents. On the contrary, commercial operators
impose burdens on local residents, because they decrease the long-term rental supply,
further exacerbating the housing affordability issue. In order to understand which
neighborhoods in New York City are experiencing such benefits and burdens of short-
term rental use, this paper uses data from Inside Airbnb, American Community Survey
(ACS), and Department of City Planning (PLUTO), and finds within central areas,
neighborhoods with lower long-term rents bear greater burdens from commercial short-
term rental use. In addition, neighborhoods with higher black and Hispanic population
share less benefits from casual short-term rental use.
Discussant(s)
Luke Stein
,
Arizona State University
Andrew Hanson
,
Marquette University
Kasper Meisner Nielsen
,
Hong Kong University of Science And Technology
Thomas Davidoff
,
University of British Columbia
JEL Classifications
- L2 - Firm Objectives, Organization, and Behavior
- R3 - Real Estate Markets, Spatial Production Analysis, and Firm Location