阿克拉是超级巨星城市吗?

R. Buckley, Ashna S. Mathema
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引用次数: 26

摘要

Gyourko, Mayer和Sinai(2006)最近对美国城市的房价行为进行了一项研究,对所谓的超级明星城市提出了质疑,在这些城市,由于高收入家庭出价高于居民,住房供应如此缺乏弹性,以至于变得难以负担。我们考虑了加纳阿克拉的情况,在这种情况下,估计住房供应的弹性,并讨论对增长和收入分配的影响。没有大量可用的数据来检验阿克拉的趋势,所以我们的方法是间接的。首先,我们使用传统单中心城市模型的一种变体来计算阿克拉住房供应相对于其他类似规模的非洲城市的弹性。这表明,其他地区的住房供应反应性要高得多。供应反应减弱与观察到的房价上涨是一致的。其次,我们估计了一些传统的住房需求方程和简化形式方程。在这些方程上加上一些限制条件,我们就可以推断出阿克拉的住房供应弹性。综上所述,我们的方法表明,阿克拉低收入家庭的住房条件如此之差,是因为市场对需求的反应极其迟钝。尽管我们追踪到的结果——高房价和低质量——相对于其他发达国家的超级巨星城市来说并不罕见,但它们是极端的。福利成本相当大,以至于这些政策除了对住房市场产生直接影响外,似乎还对实现更公平的增长产生潜在的重大影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Is Accra a Superstar City?
A recent study of house price behavior in U.S. cities by Gyourko, Mayer, and Sinai (2006) raises questions about so-called superstar cities in which housing is so inelastically supplied that it becomes unaffordable, as higher-income families outbid residents. We consider the case of Accra, Ghana, in this light, estimating the elasticity of housing supply and discussing the implications for growth and income distribution. There is not a great deal of data available to examine trends in Accra, so our method is indirect. First, we use a variant of the traditional monocentric city model to calculate the elasticity of Accra's housing supply relative to those of other similarly-sized African cities. This suggests that housing supply responsiveness is much higher elsewhere. This muted supply responsiveness is consistent with the observed higher housing prices. Second, we estimate a number of traditional housing demand equations and reduced form equations. Placing a number of restrictions on the equations allows us to infer Accra's housing supply elasticity. Taken together, our approaches suggest that lower-income families in Accra have such poor housing conditions because the market is extremely unresponsive to demand. Although the outcomes we have traced-high housing prices and low quality-are not unusual relative to the other developed country superstar cities, they are extreme. The welfare costs are considerable, so much so that in addition to direct housing market effects, these policies also appear to have potentially significant implications for the achievement of more equitable growth.
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