Functional Form and Rental Housing Market Analysis
- 1 November 1984
- journal article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Urban Studies
- Vol. 21 (4) , 367-376
- https://doi.org/10.1080/00420988420080761
Abstract
This paper tests functional form for hedonic rent regressions and for rental housing demand regressions for 19 United States metropolitan areas. In the hedonic rent regressions, both linear and loglinear forms are rejected through Box-Cox maximum likelihood procedures. Similar tests for demand regressions also reject both linear and loglinear forms. These results have useful applications to the analysis of rental housing demand by low income households. The more popular logarithmic and linear forms lead to very low estimated income elasticities for households in the low income range, whereas the preferred form provides elasticities that are significantly higher. This implies greater responsiveness to income subsidies than might otherwise be estimated.Keywords
This publication has 17 references indexed in Scilit:
- Permanent income, hedonic prices, and demand for housing: New evidenceJournal of Urban Economics, 1982
- Choice of functional form for hedonic price equationsJournal of Urban Economics, 1981
- Some empirical results on the nature of the hedonic price function for the urban housing marketJournal of Urban Economics, 1980
- Functional Forms and the Demand for Meat in the United States: A ReplyThe Review of Economics and Statistics, 1980
- Hedonic prices, price indices and housing marketsJournal of Urban Economics, 1978
- Functional Forms and the Demand for Meat in the United StatesThe Review of Economics and Statistics, 1977
- The Demand for Housing: A Lancastrian ApproachSouthern Economic Journal, 1976
- Price Indexes and Quality ChangePublished by Harvard University Press ,1971
- Do Blacks Pay More for Housing?Journal of Political Economy, 1971
- The Demand for Housing: A Review of Cross-Section EvidenceThe Review of Economics and Statistics, 1971