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Author:Voith, Richard 

Working Paper
Measuring housing services inflation

Recent papers have questioned the accuracy of the Bureau of Labor Statistics' methodology for measuring implicit rents for owner-occupied housing. The authors propose cross-checking the BLS statistics by using data on owner-occupied and rental housing from the American Housing Survey. A hedonic approach that explicitly calculates capitalization rates appears to be a feasible one for developing a methodologically consistent measure of the rental cost of owner-occupied housing.
Working Papers , Paper 99-9

Working Paper
The suburban housing market: effects of city and suburban employment growth

Communities in close proximity to areas of growing employment will experience greater upward housing demand shifts from job growth than more distant communities, but the housing market response will depend on the elasticity of supply, which is likely to differ cross communities. Using a data set of over 88,000 housing sales in suburban Philadelphia, the author finds that city employment growth has a significant positive effect on suburban house values; this effect is largest for housing closest to the central business district and declines with distance from the CBD. City employment growth ...
Working Papers , Paper 96-15

Working Paper
Natural vacancy rates and the persistence of shocks in U.S. office markets

Working Papers , Paper 88-4

Working Paper
Concentration, prices and output in the automobile industry

Working Papers , Paper 88-6

Journal Article
Does the federal tax treatment of housing affect the pattern of metropolitan development?

The U.S. tax code allows home owners to deduct mortgage interest and property taxes on their federal income tax forms. It also gives special treatment to the capital gains realized from the sale of owner-occupied housing. These advantages encourage investment in owner-occupied housing. But do these tax breaks have other, more far-reaching consequences? In this article, Dick Voith looks at how the tax code's special treatment of owner-occupied housing may affect metropolitan development
Business Review , Issue Mar , Pages 3-16

Working Paper
Regional authorities, public services, and the location of economic activity

Working Papers , Paper 90-17

Working Paper
The effects of exchange rate and productivity changes on U.S. industrial output at the state level

Working Papers , Paper 91-16

Working Paper
The tax treatment of housing: its effects on bounded and unbounded communities

This paper examines the potential impact of the federal tax treatment of housing, which provides tax advantages that increase with income and house value, on the pattern of development in U.S. metropolitan areas. The authors argue that the tax treatment of housing is likely to have impacts on older, developed communities with fixed boundaries, such as central cities, that differ from those on suburban areas, where there is an elastic supply of land. Using simple analytic models, the authors show that the tax treatment of housing not only increases the incentives for lower density development, ...
Working Papers , Paper 98-23

Working Paper
Do suburbs need cities?

Working Papers , Paper 93-27/R

Working Paper
Measuring housing services inflation

Recent papers have questioned the accuracy of the Bureau of Labor Statistics? methodology for measuring implicit rents for owner-occupied housing. We propose cross-checking the BLS statistics by using data on owner-occupied and rental housing from the American Housing Survey.
Working Papers , Paper 98-21

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