Economic Behavior, Market Signals, and Urban Ecology
Joshua K. Abbott,
Henry Klaiber and
V. Smith
No 20959, NBER Working Papers from National Bureau of Economic Research, Inc
Abstract:
Urban ecologists have extended the bounds of this field to incorporate both the effects of human activities on ecological processes (e.g., humans as generators of disturbances), and the ways in which the structures, functions, and processes of urban ecosystems, and human alterations to them, in turn alter people’s behavior. This feedback loop from the perspective of urban ecologists offers a natural connection to economic models for human behavior. At their core, housing markets reveal price signals that communicate to developers the tradeoffs consumers are willing to make for the private characteristics of homes and the attributes of the neighborhoods where they are located. These signals together with local land use rules guide the location of development. The characteristics of this development in turn influence the functioning and evolution of urban ecosystems. This paper describes markets as coordination mechanisms and conveyors of information from a complex adaptive systems perspective. It also discusses the way in which physical and biological processes, infrastructural boundaries, and the institutional equivalent of “barbed wire” all simultaneously act to shape the transmission of ecosystem services over the landscape. These processes alter the spatial distribution of housing prices in ways that are both continuous and discrete.
JEL-codes: Q20 Q51 Q57 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2015-02
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-env and nep-ure
Note: EEE
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (1)
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