Abstract.
The release of agricultural land for urban use by landowners, the development of this land into urbanized land lots by land developers and the construction of buildings by housing developers is a complex multistage process which we study and model as a chain of sub-markets. The theoretical complexity comes from the interaction between supply agents at each stage, the existence of a natural monopoly associated with a location externality such as agglomeration, access and neighborhood advantages and the spatial context of this linked market. Analytical models are derived for each supplier agent type, assuming they behave stochastically. We apply the maximum entropy framework to generate models consistent with discrete choice theory. The cases of perfect and imperfect competition are considered, along with constrained and unconstrained supply. The usual economic properties required for deterministic models are demonstrated to hold here. The calibration of parameters is discussed and equilibrium equations for quantity and prices are derived. Thus, this new model can be conceived as a key tool in an overall land use model, providing a detailed and economically consistent description of the supply side. With this enhancement, a land use equilibrium is established on more solid ground.
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This research was partially funded by grants from Fondecyt, Fondap and Millenium. The authors are thankful for the theoretical comments made by A. Jofré and anonymous referees, as well as the valuable collaboration of C. Jara.
Received: May 2000 / Accepted: September 2002
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Martínez, F., Roy, J. A model for residential supply. Ann Reg Sci 38, 531–550 (2004). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00168-003-0156-7
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00168-003-0156-7