Details about Mitchell Livy
Access statistics for papers by Mitchell Livy.
Last updated 2024-08-09. Update your information in the RePEc Author Service.
Short-id: pli1499
Jump to Journal Articles
Working Papers
2017
- Catastrophe Capitalization: Estimating Changes in Perceptions of Extreme Natural Events over Time
2017 Annual Meeting, July 30-August 1, Chicago, Illinois, Agricultural and Applied Economics Association
2016
- The Impact of Pollution Burden on Micro-Level Residential Sorting
2016 Annual Meeting, July 31-August 2, Boston, Massachusetts, Agricultural and Applied Economics Association
2015
- Willingness to Pay and Willingness to Accept Shale Drilling: A Survey of Ohio Residents
2015 AAEA & WAEA Joint Annual Meeting, July 26-28, San Francisco, California, Agricultural and Applied Economics Association
2013
- Maintaining Public Goods: Household Valuation of New and Renovated Local Parks
2013 Annual Meeting, August 4-6, 2013, Washington, D.C., Agricultural and Applied Economics Association View citations (3)
Journal Articles
2023
- Assessing the housing price capitalization of non-destructive flooding events
Research in Economics, 2023, 77, (2), 265-274
- Determining the Drivers of Housing Market Seasonality
The B.E. Journal of Economic Analysis & Policy, 2023, 23, (3), 853-866
2022
- Price and Liquidity Dynamics for Single and Multi-Family Homes during Housing Market Shocks
The Journal of Real Estate Finance and Economics, 2022, 65, (1), 22-47
2021
- Days and Confused: Housing Price and Liquidity Response to New Local Public Schools
Journal of Real Estate Research, 2021, 43, (1), 21-46
- Equilibrium Outcomes and Amenity Valuation in a Multispatial Residential Sorting Framework
Land Economics, 2021, 97, (3), 509-527
- Measuring environmental (dis)amenity value during a pandemic: Early evidence from Maryland
Journal of Environmental Economics and Management, 2021, 106, (C) View citations (2)
2020
- Determining the effect of abnormal temperatures on the housing market
Applied Economics Letters, 2020, 27, (3), 233-236 View citations (2)
- Extreme natural events are associated with significant economic losses and expected to increase in frequency and intensity with time. While previous research has primarily investigated singular event types, the relative impact of multiple types of reoccurring events on the housing market has not been extensively studied. Filling this void in the literature, I estimate the housing price capitalization of numerous fire and flooding incidents in Southern California between 2000 and 2015. The results provide evidence that capitalization of extreme natural events is heterogeneous across type, time, and reoccurrence, and these variables are important when considering related policies involving outreach and education
Economics Bulletin, 2020, 40, (1), 665-678
2018
- Intra-school district capitalization of property tax rates
Journal of Housing Economics, 2018, 41, (C), 227-236 View citations (3)
2017
- The effect of local amenities on house price appreciation amid market shocks: The case of school quality
Journal of Housing Economics, 2017, 36, (C), 62-72 View citations (9)
2016
- Maintaining Public Goods: The Capitalized Value of Local Park Renovations
Land Economics, 2016, 92, (1), 96-116 View citations (12)
|
The links between different versions of a paper are constructed automatically by matching on the titles.
Please contact if a link is incorrect.
Use this form
to add links between versions where the titles do not match.
|