Spatial analyses in price models: looking for evidence from a land price study

It is well-known that empirical models to estimate determinants of price are generally ad hoc in nature, not least because markets for different goods are affected by different contexts and factors. Even if the good is the same, data and measurement constraints often yield different model specificat...

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Main Author: Khalid, Haniza
Format: Conference or Workshop Item
Language:English
Published: 2014
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Online Access:http://irep.iium.edu.my/38624/4/ICRMMS_spatial.pdf
http://irep.iium.edu.my/38624/
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spelling my.iium.irep.38624 http://irep.iium.edu.my/38624/ Spatial analyses in price models: looking for evidence from a land price study Khalid, Haniza HA29 Theory and method of social science statistics HB131 Methodology.Mathematical economics. Quantitative methods HB221 Price It is well-known that empirical models to estimate determinants of price are generally ad hoc in nature, not least because markets for different goods are affected by different contexts and factors. Even if the good is the same, data and measurement constraints often yield different model specifications (and hence, results) in different studies. Model selection is therefore, a particularly important exercise, one that is hoped to reveal a ‘final’ model which best subscribes to market realities and available data. For a good as heterogeneous as land, where every plot exhibits unique combination of attributes, price studies usually employ the hedonic modeling approach. With the advancement of spatial econometrics and computing abilities, more price studies are incorporating varying forms of spatial analyses to test structural stability of the price function or to control for spatial error dependence and serial auto-regressive effects on price. Estimation of a hedonic price function using Malaysian dataset of agricultural land sales values indicates the presence of spatial disaggregation and spatial dependence. However, diagnostic tests and actual estimation of spatial models are not unambiguous while predicted errors do not seem to vary all that much from ones generated by simpler models. Despite the conceptual appeal of spatial analyses, the inefficiency attributable to spatial biases might not be large enough to cause critical errors in policy decisions. 2014-09-27 Conference or Workshop Item PeerReviewed application/pdf en http://irep.iium.edu.my/38624/4/ICRMMS_spatial.pdf Khalid, Haniza (2014) Spatial analyses in price models: looking for evidence from a land price study. In: International Conference on Research Methods in Management and Social Sciences (ICRMMS-2014), 27-28 September 2014, Kuala Lumpur.
institution Universiti Islam Antarabangsa Malaysia
building IIUM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider International Islamic University Malaysia
content_source IIUM Repository (IREP)
url_provider http://irep.iium.edu.my/
language English
topic HA29 Theory and method of social science statistics
HB131 Methodology.Mathematical economics. Quantitative methods
HB221 Price
spellingShingle HA29 Theory and method of social science statistics
HB131 Methodology.Mathematical economics. Quantitative methods
HB221 Price
Khalid, Haniza
Spatial analyses in price models: looking for evidence from a land price study
description It is well-known that empirical models to estimate determinants of price are generally ad hoc in nature, not least because markets for different goods are affected by different contexts and factors. Even if the good is the same, data and measurement constraints often yield different model specifications (and hence, results) in different studies. Model selection is therefore, a particularly important exercise, one that is hoped to reveal a ‘final’ model which best subscribes to market realities and available data. For a good as heterogeneous as land, where every plot exhibits unique combination of attributes, price studies usually employ the hedonic modeling approach. With the advancement of spatial econometrics and computing abilities, more price studies are incorporating varying forms of spatial analyses to test structural stability of the price function or to control for spatial error dependence and serial auto-regressive effects on price. Estimation of a hedonic price function using Malaysian dataset of agricultural land sales values indicates the presence of spatial disaggregation and spatial dependence. However, diagnostic tests and actual estimation of spatial models are not unambiguous while predicted errors do not seem to vary all that much from ones generated by simpler models. Despite the conceptual appeal of spatial analyses, the inefficiency attributable to spatial biases might not be large enough to cause critical errors in policy decisions.
format Conference or Workshop Item
author Khalid, Haniza
author_facet Khalid, Haniza
author_sort Khalid, Haniza
title Spatial analyses in price models: looking for evidence from a land price study
title_short Spatial analyses in price models: looking for evidence from a land price study
title_full Spatial analyses in price models: looking for evidence from a land price study
title_fullStr Spatial analyses in price models: looking for evidence from a land price study
title_full_unstemmed Spatial analyses in price models: looking for evidence from a land price study
title_sort spatial analyses in price models: looking for evidence from a land price study
publishDate 2014
url http://irep.iium.edu.my/38624/4/ICRMMS_spatial.pdf
http://irep.iium.edu.my/38624/
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