Economics of Property and Planning

Economics of Property and Planning

Future Value

Squires, Graham

Taylor & Francis Ltd

11/2021

218

Mole

Inglês

9780367629670

15 a 20 dias

430

Descrição não disponível.
1. Introduction to future value: the economics of property and planning 2. Economists and economic problems in property and planning 3. Resources and scarcity in property and planning 4. Microeconomics: market forces and markets 5. Macroeconomics in the economics of property and planning 6. Spatial and locational approaches in the economics of property and planning 7. Market failure, externalities, and efficiencies in property and planning 8. Housing and neighbourhood in the economics of property and planning 9. Fiscal approaches and value capture in the economics of property and planning 10. Infrastructure economics in property and planning 11. Climate change, environmental limits to economic growth, sustainability, and resilience 12. Measuring value in the economics of property and planning 13. Policy and new directions in the economics of property and planning
Este título pertence ao(s) assunto(s) indicados(s). Para ver outros títulos clique no assunto desejado.
Urban Heat Islands;Public Private Partnerships;Affordable housing;Impact Fees;Agglomeration economies;Climate Change;aggregate demand and supply;Tax Increment Financing Districts;Aims of planning;allocative efficiency;Macroeconomic Objectives;Avoidance cost;Vice Versa;balance of payments;Non-price Determinants;capital good and flows;Housing Markets;central business districts;PPB;centrally planned economies;Affordable Housing Development;cities;Brownfield Development;Civic design;Multiple Nuclei Model;Long Term Cash Flow;common property resources;Port Authority;Community charge;VC Instrument;comparative advantage;Infrastructure Levies;compensation payments;Betterment Tax;competitive advantage;CBD Core;comprehensive development areas;Fiscal Extraction;concentric zones;IZ;Congestion;Brownfield Sites;congestion charging;House Price Affordability;Conservation areas;Unconstrained Growth;conservations;consumer price index;consumer protection;Contingent valuation;conurbations;Cost-benefit analysis;cost-effectiveness;Council Tax;credit;crime;Currency;Damage Cost;debt;demand;deregulation;Developers;Development Gains Tax;Development Plan;discounting;disequilibrium;eco-cities;economic impact assessments;economies of scale;education;effective demand;efficiency;Elasticity of supply of housing;employment;enlightenment;enterprise zones;entrepreneurship;environment;equilibrium;Exchange rates;Exclusionary zoning;Expectations;External costs;Externalities;Factors of production;Financial capital;Fiscal policy;Fiscal zoning;Foreign direct investment;Free goods and services;Free riding;Gentrification;Gini coefficient;Global financial crisis;Global warming;Globalisation;Government spending;Green belts;Green cities;Gross domestic product;Growth;Hedonic prices;Historic districts;House prices;Housing tenure;Income;Inferior goods;Inflation;Infrastructure;Interest Rates;Internal costs;Land banking;Land market;Land owners;Land prices;Land use patterns;Life-cycle cost analysis;Listing of historic buildings;Local government;Localism;Macroeconomics;Marginal costs and benefits;Market failure;Market forces;Merit goods;Meso-economics;Microeconomics;Migration;Mixed economies;Monetary policy;Money supply;Monopolies;Moral hazard;Natural monopolies;Natural resources;Negative multiplier;Negative planning;Neighbourhood effects;Neoliberalism;Net present value;Normative economics;Open economy;Opportunity cost;Paradox of thrift;Pareto efficiency;Parks;Permits;Plan led development;Planning delays;Planning gain;Planning obligations;Planning process;Population growth;Positive economics;Poverty;Privatisation;Profit maximisation;Public choice;Public goods;Public participation;Public-private partnerships;Purchasing power parities;Quantitative easing;Redistribution;Regeneration;Regional policy;Regulation and regulatory policy;Renewable energy;Rent seeking;Residential density;Resource allocation;Retail prices index;Retail use;Revealed preference;Ribbon development;Second homes;Shared spaces;Social capital;Social cost;Social exclusion;Social housing;Sorting;Spatial models;Speculation;Spill-over effects;Stagnation;Standard of living;Subsidies;Substitutes;Suburbs;Supply of land;Sustainability;Sustainable development;Tall buildings;Tax relief;Taxation;Tipping point;Towns;Transportation;Travel cost method;Unpriced resources;Urban growth;Urban policy;Urban sprawl;Urbanisation;User charges;Utility maximisation;Valuation;value of planning permission;Welfare;Willingness to accept;Willingness to pay;Zero-carbon