Cities and the urban land premium / Henri L.F. de Groot, VU University Amsterdam, Tinbergen Institute and Ecorys NEI, the Netherlands, Gerard Marlet, Atlas voor Gemeenten, Utrecht University School of Economics and University of Groningen, the Netherlands, Coen Teulings, University of Cambridge, UK, University of Amsterdam and Tinbergen Institute, the Netherlands, Wouter Vermeulen, CPB Netherlands Bureau for Economic Policy Analysis, the Netherlands.

By: Groot, Henri L. F. de [author.]
Contributor(s): Marlet, Gerard, 1970- [author.] | Teulings, C. N [author.] | Vermeulen, Wouter [author.]
Material type: TextTextLanguage: English Description: vii, 135 pages : illustrations (some color), maps ; 25 cmISBN: 9781784717438Subject(s): Land use, Urban -- Netherlands | Cities and towns -- Netherlands | Cost and standard of living -- Netherlands | Urban economics | Cities and towns | Cost and standard of living | Land use, Urban | Urban economics | Bodenpreis | Immobilienökonomie | Stadtökonomie | Netherlands | NiederlandeDDC classification: 339.42
Contents:
1. The resurrection of the city -- 2. Land underneath the city -- 3. The dynamics of the Dutch system of cities -- 4. The production city -- 5. The consumer city -- 6. Land prices and governmental policy -- 7. Agglomeration benefits and spatial planning policy -- 8. Social cost-benefit analysis of an inner city transformation project -- 9. Agenda for the future.
Summary: After a long period of suburbanization, cities have been in vogue again since the 1980s. But why are people prepared to spend far more money on a small house in the city centre than on a large house in the countryside - and why doesn't this apply to all cities? The authors of this book argue that the appeal of the city in the 21st century is not only determined by the production side of the economy, but also by the consumption side: its array of shops, cultural activities and, for example, an historic city centre. All these factors translate into a huge disparity in land prices as well as different wages for urban and rural citizens. This study maps out these variations, with an economic approach to spatial planning and an emphasis on land rents as a basis for cost-benefit analysis. The use of land prices as a reflection of the appreciation for urban amenities is an ideal measurement tool in the cost-benefit analyses for local investments and spatial planning policies, and sheds new light on the organisation of public administration. This accessible book will be of interest to geographers, economists and social scientists, as well as policymakers involved in urban planning, seeking an in-depth understanding of land prices and the increasing importance of cities in the 21st century.
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Includes bibliographical references and index.

1. The resurrection of the city -- 2. Land underneath the city -- 3. The dynamics of the Dutch system of cities -- 4. The production city -- 5. The consumer city -- 6. Land prices and governmental policy -- 7. Agglomeration benefits and spatial planning policy -- 8. Social cost-benefit analysis of an inner city transformation project -- 9. Agenda for the future.

After a long period of suburbanization, cities have been in vogue again since the 1980s. But why are people prepared to spend far more money on a small house in the city centre than on a large house in the countryside - and why doesn't this apply to all cities? The authors of this book argue that the appeal of the city in the 21st century is not only determined by the production side of the economy, but also by the consumption side: its array of shops, cultural activities and, for example, an historic city centre. All these factors translate into a huge disparity in land prices as well as different wages for urban and rural citizens. This study maps out these variations, with an economic approach to spatial planning and an emphasis on land rents as a basis for cost-benefit analysis. The use of land prices as a reflection of the appreciation for urban amenities is an ideal measurement tool in the cost-benefit analyses for local investments and spatial planning policies, and sheds new light on the organisation of public administration. This accessible book will be of interest to geographers, economists and social scientists, as well as policymakers involved in urban planning, seeking an in-depth understanding of land prices and the increasing importance of cities in the 21st century.

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