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Full Citation

Title: Superstar Cities

Citation Type: Working Paper

Publication Year: 2006

Abstract: Differences in house price and income growth rates between 1950 and 2000 across metropolitan areas have led to an ever-widening gap in housing values and incomes between the typical and highest-priced locations. We show that the growing spatial skewness in house prices and incomes are related and can be explained, at least in part, by inelastic supply of land in some attractive locations combined with an increasing number of high-income households nationally. Scarce land leads to a bidding-up of land prices and a sorting of high-income families relatively more into those desirable, unique, low housing construction markets, which we label superstar cities. Continued growth in the number of high-income families in the U.S. provides support for ever-larger differences in house prices across inelastically supplied locations and income-based spatial sorting. Our empirical work confirms a number of equilibrium relationships implied by the superstar cities framework and shows that it occurs both at the metropolitan area level and at the sub-MSA level, controlling for MSA characteristics.

User Submitted?: No

Authors: Mayer, Christopher J.; Gyourko, Joseph; Sinai, Todd

Series Title:

Publication Number: WP 12355

Institution: NATIONAL BUREAU OF ECONOMIC RESEARCH

Pages:

Publisher Location: Cambridge, Massachussets

Data Collections: IPUMS USA

Topics: Housing and Segregation, Other

Countries:

IPUMS NHGIS NAPP IHIS ATUS Terrapop