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The literature on home value diminution attributable to environmental degradation and its possible reversal typically ignores indirect effects upon neighborhood characteristics that can exacerbate the overall change in property values, resulting in underestimates of diminution and overestimates of recovery. Furthermore, to the extent that direct price effects and neighborhood transition effects respond differently to remediation efforts, the relatively new postremediation literature misses an important part of the recovery process. This book examines both direct and indirect effects and finds…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
The literature on home value diminution attributable to environmental degradation and its possible reversal typically ignores indirect effects upon neighborhood characteristics that can exacerbate the overall change in property values, resulting in underestimates of diminution and overestimates of recovery. Furthermore, to the extent that direct price effects and neighborhood transition effects respond differently to remediation efforts, the relatively new postremediation literature misses an important part of the recovery process. This book examines both direct and indirect effects and finds in the case of Houston Superfund sites, while the direct value impacts of proximity to toxic waste sites was significantly reduced after remediation, the indirect effects associated with induced demographic changes were much slower to reverse, producing a housing market inertia that stifled full home value recovery.
Autorenporträt
Dr. Recai Aydin currently serves in Turkish Police Academy as an Associate Professor of Economics. He teaches Introduction to Economics, Public Economics and International Political Economy courses. He worked in various universities in the United States as an Assistant Professor of Economics and Statistics between 2005-2009.