Urban Economy: Real Estate Economics and Public Policy
ISBN: 9781003027515
Platform/Publisher: Taylor & Francis / Routledge
Digital rights: Users: Unlimited; Printing: Unlimited; Download: Unlimited

Subjects: Built Environment; Economics Finance Business & Industry; Engineering & Technology; Environment and Sustainability; Geography; Politics & International Relations; Social Sciences; Urban Studies; Economics Finance and Accounting; Engineering Economics; Environment & the City; Environment & Economics; Urban Studies; Urban Economics; Urban Policy; Urban Theory; Cities & Infrastructure (Urban Studies); Building and Construction; Planning; Property; Finance; Human Geography; Public Administration & Management; Sociology & Social Policy; Construction Economics; City and Urban Planning; Housing and Communities; Spatial and Regional Planning; Property Development; Property Valuation; Macroeconomics; Microeconomics; Industrial Economics; Property & Real Estate Finance; Economic Geography; Urban Geography; Planning - Human Geography; Public Policy; Urban Sociology; Social Policy;


Urban Economy: Real Estate Economics and Public Policy analyses urban economic change and public policy in a more practical way than a typical urban economics book. The book has a distinctive framework that considers the underlying reasons, and the consequences of urban change for real estate investors and policy makers.

Part 1 covers the basics of urban economics and real estate markets, including housing and commercial. Part 2 looks at the reformulation of urban systems and the reasons why. It then considers the consequences for real estate markets and investment of decentralisation forces and emerging technology. The issues that arise for urban public policy are then discussed, notably transport policies, public finance and sustainability, before a chapter examining housing neighbourhood and housing market dynamics and a shift from spatial change to regeneration. Part 3 reverses the dominant perspective of Part 2 to assess the effectiveness of how property led policies can positively influence a local economy and urban regeneration. The chapters consider several important policy questions and constraints and draw on a number of case studies that illustrate the benefits and drawbacks.

The book includes chapter objectives, self-assessment questions, chapter summaries, learning outcomes, case studies, global data and statistics and is a new textbook for core courses in urban economics and real estate economics on global Real Estate, Planning and related degree courses.


Colin Jones is an urban economist who has been a professor at Heriot-Watt University since 1998. He formerly worked at the Universities of Manchester, Glasgow and the West of Scotland. His research interests span commercial, industrial and housing market economics, investment and policy together with the macroeconomy and local economic development. Colin has edited or authored eight books, published more than seventy papers in academic journals and has taught urban economics and real estate investment at undergraduate and postgraduate levels for more than 40 years.

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