LANDSCAPES ON HOLD: Opening up Monopoly Rent Gaps on Crete's Cape Sidero
Ioanna P. Korfiati
International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 2022, vol. 46, issue 4, 576-593
Abstract:
To explain the continuous hold of a single touristic real estate investor over the greater part of Crete's easternmost peninsula, Cape Sidero, for a period of over thirty years, this article examines the production of rent gaps on ‘exceptional’ rural land through increasing potential rent rather than a falling capitalized rent. I examine Neil Smith's ‘alternative’ rent gap hypothesis as it applies to two main factors: the production of and sustained control over land of monopolistic quality, which has no fixed value and is resistant to depreciation; and the dramatic neoliberal reworking of land markets through institutional and legislative changes, which produce legally ‘exceptional’ spaces. I employ the conceptual lens of the rent gap to examine how opening up a rent gap on ‘exceptional land’ based solely on the promise of (re)development can be a sufficient driver of land dispossession. Simply sustaining this promise can perpetuate land with monopolistic quality as a site of rent‐generating possibility, and while this process might never lead to (re)development, it can result in the submersion of the landscape into a captive, limbo state, stealing its future.
Date: 2022
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:bla:ijurrs:v:46:y:2022:i:4:p:576-593
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