International Journal of Housing Markets and Analysis | 2021

Gentrification effects on housing prices in neighbouring areas

 
 
 

Abstract


\nPurpose\nThis study aims to measure the occurrence of gentrification and to relate gentrification with housing values.\n\n\nDesign/methodology/approach\nThe authors have used Getis-Ord statistics to identify and quantify gentrification in different residential areas in a case study of Stockholm, Sweden. Gentrification will be measured in two dimensions, namely, income and population. In step two, this measure is included in a traditional hedonic pricing model where the intention is to explain future housing prices.\n\n\nFindings\nThe results indicate that the parameter estimate is statistically significant, suggesting that gentrification contributes to higher housing values in gentrified areas and near gentrified neighbourhoods. This latter possible spillover effect of house prices due to gentrification by income and population was similar in both the hedonic price and treatment effect models. According to the hedonic price model, proximity to the gentrified area increases housing value by around 6%–8%. The spillover effect on price distribution seems to be consistent and stable in gentrified areas.\n\n\nOriginality/value\nA few studies estimate the effect of gentrification on property values. Those studies focussed on analysing the impacts of gentrification in higher rents and increasing house prices within the gentrifying areas, not gentrification on property prices in neighbouring areas. Hence, one of the paper’s contributions is to bridge the gap in previous studies by measuring gentrification’s impact on neighbouring housing prices.\n

Volume None
Pages None
DOI 10.1108/ijhma-04-2021-0049
Language English
Journal International Journal of Housing Markets and Analysis

Full Text