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Issues at the RuralUrban Fringe: Discussion

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Open-space provision is generally viewed as the provision of a local public good. ... Preserved agriculture in clustered subdivision provides 6% to 11% premium. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Issues at the RuralUrban Fringe: Discussion


1
Issues at the Rural-Urban Fringe Discussion
  • Dave Lewis
  • Department of Agricultural and Applied Economics
  • University of Wisconsin-Madison

AAEA Sessions, ASSA annual meeting San Francisco,
CA January, 2009
2
Issues at the Rural-Urban Fringe
  • Acquiring land for open-space conservation has
    become a defining feature of urban and rural
    landscapes.
  • 18.4 million acres of private land were
    conserved between 1998 and 2005 in the U.S.
  • 15 billion spent during this time majority of
    expenditures at state and local levels.
  • Over 80 of the more than 1000 local and regional
    open-space referenda passed between1998 and 2003.

Source The Trust for Public Land
3
Issues at the Rural-Urban Fringe
  • Implicit in all this activity is some form of
    market failure in the allocation of open-space.
  • Open-space (conserved or otherwise) can provide
    external benefits (e.g. recreation, privacy,
    landscape character, etc.).
  • Evidence that open-space becomes capitalized into
    neighboring land values.
  • Open-space provision is generally viewed as the
    provision of a local public good.

4
Issues at the Rural-Urban Fringe
  • General question for economics what is the
    efficient pattern of developed and undeveloped
    land?
  • How much open-space should be conserved by the
    government?
  • What should the spatial pattern of open-space
    look like?
  • External benefits from direct use of open-space
    tend to be local.
  • Spatial pattern of habitat important for
    wildlife.
  • How does the allocation of open-space alter the
    equilibrium landscape?
  • What policy mechanisms can be useful? How to
    spatially target policies?

5
Issues at the Rural-Urban Fringe
  • Related issues examined in this session
  • How can policy instruments be structured to yield
    a more efficient landscape? (Bento, Franco, and
    Kaffine)
  • What empirical methods can be used to quantify
    open-space benefits? (Klaiber and Phaneuf)
  • Is clustered development efficient? (Towe)

6
Issues at the Rural-Urban Fringe
  • Development Taxes and Revenue-Recycling (Bento,
    Franco, Kaffine)
  • Revenue-raising instruments can be used to
    alleviate other land-use distortions.
  • Tax development and use revenue to i) buy
    easements at the fringe, ii) alleviate blight in
    the core.
  • Several illuminating numerical results
  • Efficiency gains from recycling.
  • Distribution of gains gt which landowners win,
    which lose.
  • Distributional analysis potentially very useful
    in structuring incentives.

7
Issues at the Rural-Urban Fringe
  • Development Taxes and Revenue-Recycling (Bento,
    Franco, Kaffine)
  • Q What is the efficient landscape?
  • Should be solvable numerically.
  • Can a uniform tax achieve the efficient
    landscape?
  • What if a development tax saves too much land?
  • Recycling revenues towards land-use could make
    things worse.
  • Recycling revenues towards other things (e.g.
    crime, schools, etc.) would be more efficient.

8
Issues at the Rural-Urban Fringe
  • Empirical methods for quantifying open-space
    benefits (Klaiber and Phaneuf)
  • Open-space can change the equilibrium landscape.
  • Are sorting models necessary?
  • Useful for examining non-marginal changes.
  • Are the additional capabilities of the sorting
    model simply the result of additional
    assumptions?
  • Dataset is impressive.
  • Goal is to specify hedonic/sorting models with
    best practices.
  • Results indicate significant differences across
    alternative modeling strategies.

9
Issues at the Rural-Urban Fringe
  • Empirical methods for quantifying open-space
    benefits (Klaiber and Phaneuf)
  • Why are results different across models?
  • Is open-space identified in the hedonic? Could
    neighborhood fixed effects (block group level)
    help?
  • How much are the sorting results driven by an
    assumption of frictionless moving?
  • Is there an argument that simple models might be
    preferable when misspecification is present?
  • How would a random bidding model perform?
  • A simulated dataset where the true values of
    open-space are known might be useful.

10
Issues at the Rural-Urban Fringe
  • Valuation of open space by Type (Towe)
  • Q land price effects of subdivisions with
    clustered development and open-space?
  • Results
  • Preserved agriculture in clustered subdivision
    provides 6 to 11 premium.
  • No premium when clustered subdivision consists of
    open-space owned by homeowners.
  • Repeat-sales results particularly interesting
  • Interaction between clustered subdivisions and
    growth in neighboring development.
  • Value of buffering from clustered subdivisions
    increases as development grows.

11
Issues at the Rural-Urban Fringe
  • Valuation of open space by Type (Towe)
  • Why does preserved agriculture yield a premium
    but not homeowner-owned open-space?
  • Intuition suggests the opposite.
  • Is land good for agriculture also good for
    development? E.g. well-drained slopes.
  • Q is it more efficient to cluster all parcels
    with smaller lots and more communal open-space?
  • Depends on whether neighboring open-space is a
    substitute for private lot size.
  • Little evidence on this, yet interaction terms in
    the hedonic could be used to shed light.

12
Issues at the Rural-Urban Fringe
  • Summary
  • Many issues to examine regarding the efficient
    allocation of developed and undeveloped land.
  • Papers here provide contributions for
  • Policy mechanisms.
  • Empirical methods.
  • Clustering regulations.
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