- Book Options and Supplements
- About the Authors
- Chapter 1: What Is Economics?Print Chapter|
Chapter 1 Print–It–Yourself has been added to your cart for $1.99.
Chapter Study AidsChapter 1 Study Aid Package has been added to your cart for $2.49.
- Chapter 2: Supply and DemandPrint Chapter|
Chapter 2 Print–It–Yourself has been added to your cart for $1.99.
Chapter Study AidsChapter 2 Study Aid Package has been added to your cart for $2.49.
- Chapter 3: QuantificationPrint Chapter|
Chapter 3 Print–It–Yourself has been added to your cart for $1.99.
Chapter Study AidsChapter 3 Study Aid Package has been added to your cart for $2.49.
- Chapter 4: The U.S. EconomyPrint Chapter|
Chapter 4 Print–It–Yourself has been added to your cart for $1.99.
Chapter Study AidsChapter 4 Study Aid Package has been added to your cart for $2.49.
- Chapter 5: Government InterventionsPrint Chapter|
Chapter 5 Print–It–Yourself has been added to your cart for $1.99.
Chapter Study AidsChapter 5 Study Aid Package has been added to your cart for $2.49.
- Chapter 6: TradePrint Chapter|
Chapter 6 Print–It–Yourself has been added to your cart for $1.99.
Chapter Study AidsChapter 6 Study Aid Package has been added to your cart for $2.49.
- Chapter 7: ExternalitiesPrint Chapter|
Chapter 7 Print–It–Yourself has been added to your cart for $1.99.
Chapter Study AidsChapter 7 Study Aid Package has been added to your cart for $2.49.
- Chapter 8: Public GoodsPrint Chapter|
Chapter 8 Print–It–Yourself has been added to your cart for $1.99.
Chapter Study AidsChapter 8 Study Aid Package has been added to your cart for $2.49.
- Chapter 9: Producer Theory: CostsPrint Chapter|
Chapter 9 Print–It–Yourself has been added to your cart for $1.99.
Chapter Study AidsChapter 9 Study Aid Package has been added to your cart for $2.49.
- Chapter 10: Producer Theory: DynamicsPrint Chapter|
Chapter 10 Print–It–Yourself has been added to your cart for $1.99.
Chapter Study AidsChapter 10 Study Aid Package has been added to your cart for $2.49.
- Chapter 11: InvestmentPrint Chapter|
Chapter 11 Print–It–Yourself has been added to your cart for $1.99.
Chapter Study AidsChapter 11 Study Aid Package has been added to your cart for $2.49.
- Chapter 12: Consumer TheoryPrint Chapter|
Chapter 12 Print–It–Yourself has been added to your cart for $1.99.
Chapter Study AidsChapter 12 Study Aid Package has been added to your cart for $2.49.
- Chapter 13: Applied Consumer TheoryPrint Chapter|
Chapter 13 Print–It–Yourself has been added to your cart for $1.99.
Chapter Study AidsChapter 13 Study Aid Package has been added to your cart for $2.49.
- Chapter 14: General EquilibriumPrint Chapter|
Chapter 14 Print–It–Yourself has been added to your cart for $1.99.
Chapter Study AidsChapter 14 Study Aid Package has been added to your cart for $2.49.
- Chapter 15: MonopolyPrint Chapter|
Chapter 15 Print–It–Yourself has been added to your cart for $1.99.
Chapter Study AidsChapter 15 Study Aid Package has been added to your cart for $2.49.
- Chapter 16: Games Strategic BehaviorPrint Chapter|
Chapter 16 Print–It–Yourself has been added to your cart for $1.99.
Chapter Study AidsChapter 16 Study Aid Package has been added to your cart for $2.49.
- Chapter 17: Imperfect CompetitionPrint Chapter|
Chapter 17 Print–It–Yourself has been added to your cart for $1.99.
Chapter Study AidsChapter 17 Study Aid Package has been added to your cart for $2.49.
- Chapter 18: InformationPrint Chapter|
Chapter 18 Print–It–Yourself has been added to your cart for $1.99.
Chapter Study AidsChapter 18 Study Aid Package has been added to your cart for $2.49.
- Chapter 19: Agency TheoryPrint Chapter|
Chapter 19 Print–It–Yourself has been added to your cart for $1.99.
Chapter Study AidsChapter 19 Study Aid Package has been added to your cart for $2.49.
- Chapter 20: AuctionsPrint Chapter|
Chapter 20 Print–It–Yourself has been added to your cart for $1.99.
Chapter Study AidsChapter 20 Study Aid Package has been added to your cart for $2.49.
- Chapter 21: AntitrustPrint Chapter|
Chapter 21 Print–It–Yourself has been added to your cart for $1.99.
Chapter Study AidsChapter 21 Study Aid Package has been added to your cart for $2.49.
There are no key terms for this page.
Urban Real Estate Prices
Learning Objective
How are the prices of suburban ranch houses, downtown apartments, and rural ranches determined?
An important point to understand is that the good, in limited supply in cities, is not a physical structure like a house, but the land on which the house sits. The cost of building a house in Los Angeles is quite similar to the cost of building a house in Rochester, New York. The big difference is the price of land. A $1 million house in Los Angeles might be a $400,000 house sitting on a $600,000 parcel of land. The same house in Rochester might be $500,000—a $400,000 house on a $100,000 parcel of land.
Usually, land is what fluctuates in value rather than the price of the house that sits on the land. When a newspaper reports that house prices rose, in fact what rose were land prices, for the price of housing has changed only at a slow pace, reflecting increased wages of house builders and changes in the price of lumber and other inputs. These do change, but historically the changes have been small compared to the price of land.
We can construct a simple model of a city to illustrate the determination of land prices. Suppose the city is constructed on a flat plane. People work at the origin (0, 0). This simplifying assumption is intended to capture the fact that a relatively small, central portion of most cities involves business, with a large area given over to housing. The assumption is extreme, but not unreasonable as a description of some cities.
Suppose commuting times are proportional to distance from the origin. Let c(t) be the cost to the person of a commute of time t, and let the time taken be t = λr, where r is the distance. The function c should reflect both the transportation costs and the value of time lost. The parameter λ accounts for the inverse of the speed in commuting, with a higher λ indicating slower commuting. In addition, we assume that people occupy a constant amount of land. This assumption is clearly wrong empirically, and we will consider making house size a choice variable later.
A person choosing a house priced at p(r), at distance r, thus pays c(λr) + p(r) for the combination of housing and transportation. People will choose the lowest cost alternative. If people have identical preferences about housing and commuting, then house prices p will depend on distance and will be determined by c(λr) + p(r) equal to a constant, so that people are indifferent to the distance from the city’s center—decreased commute time is exactly compensated by increased house prices.
The remaining piece of the model is to figure out the constant. To do this, we need to figure out the area of the city. If the total population is N, and people occupy an area of one per person, then the city size rmax satisfies and thus
At the edge of the city, the value of land is given by some other use, like agriculture. From the perspective of the determinant of the city’s prices, this value is approximately constant. As the city takes more land, the change in agricultural land is a very small portion of the total land used for agriculture. Let the value of agricultural land be v per housing unit size. Then the price of housing is p(rmax) = v, because this is the value of land at the edge of the city. This lets us compute the price of all housing in the city:
or
This equation produces housing prices like those illustrated in Figure 13.2, “House price gradient”, where the peak is the city’s center. The height of the figure indicates the price of housing.
Figure 13.2. House price gradient

It is straightforward to verify that house prices increase in the population N and the commuting time parameter λ, as one would expect. To quantify the predictions, we consider a city with a population of 1,000,000; a population density of 10,000 per square mile; and an agricultural use value of $6 million per square mile. To translate these assumptions into the model’s structure, first note that a population density of 10,000 per square mile creates a fictitious “unit of measure” of about 52.8 feet, which we’ll call a purlong, so that there is one person per square purlong (2,788 square feet). Then the agricultural value of a property is v = $600 per square purlong. Note that this density requires a city of radius rmax equal to 564 purlongs, which is 5.64 miles.
The only remaining structure left to identify in the model is the commuting cost c. To simplify the calculations, let c be linear. Suppose that the daily cost of commuting is $2 per mile (roundtrip), so that the present value of daily commuting costs in perpetuity is about $10,000 per mile.[63] This translates into a cost of commuting of $100 per purlong. Thus, we obtain
Thus, the same 2,788-square-foot property at the city’s edge sells for $600 versus $57,000, less than six miles away at the city’s center. With reasonable parameters, this model readily creates dramatic differences in land prices, based purely on commuting time.
As constructed, a quadrupling of population approximately doubles the price of land in the central city. This probably understates the change, since a doubling of the population would likely increase road congestion, increasing λ and further increasing the price of central city real estate.
As presented, the model contains three major unrealistic assumptions. First, everyone lives on an identically sized piece of land. In fact, however, the amount of land used tends to fall as prices rise. At $53 per square foot, most of us buy a lot less land than at 20 cents per square foot. As a practical matter, the reduction of land per capita is accomplished both through smaller housing units and through taller buildings, which produce more housing floor space per acre of land. Second, people have distinct preferences and the disutility of commuting, as well as the value of increased space, varies with the individual. Third, congestion levels are generally endogenous—the more people who live between two points, the greater the traffic density and, consequently, the higher the level of λ. Problems arise with the first two assumptions because of the simplistic nature of consumer preferences embedded in the model, while the third assumption presents an equilibrium issue requiring consideration of transportation choices.
This model can readily be extended to incorporate different types of people, different housing sizes, and endogenous congestion. To illustrate such generalizations, consider making the housing size endogenous. Suppose preferences are represented by the utility function where H is the house size that the person chooses, and r is the distance that he or she chooses. This adaptation of the model reflects two issues. First, the transport cost has been set to be linear in distance for simplicity. Second, the marginal value of housing decreases in the house size, but the value of housing doesn’t depend on distance from the center. For these preferences to make sense, α < 1 (otherwise either zero or an infinite house size emerges). A person with these preferences would optimally choose a house size of resulting in utility Utility at every location is constant, so
A valuable attribute of the form of the equation for p is that the general form depends on the equilibrium values only through the single number u*. This functional form produces the same qualitative shapes as shown in Figure 13.2, “House price gradient”. Using the form, we can solve for the housing size H:
The space in the interval [r, r + Δ] is π(2rΔ + Δ2). In this interval, there are approximately people. Thus, the number of people within rmax of the city’s center is
This equation, when combined with the value of land on the periphery jointly determines rmax and u*.
When different people have different preferences, the people with the highest disutility of commuting will tend to live closer to the city’s center. These tend to be people with the highest wages, since one of the costs of commuting is time that could have been spent working.
Key Takeaways
An important point to understand is that, in cities, houses are not in limited supply; but it is the land on which the houses sit that is.
The circular city model involves people who work at a single point but live dispersed around that point. It is both the size of the city and the housing prices that are determined by consumers who are indifferent to commuting costs—lower housing prices at a greater distance balance the increased commuting costs.
Substituting plausible parameters into the circular city model produces dramatic house price differentials, explaining much of the price differences within cities.
A quadrupling of population approximately doubles the price of land in the central city. This likely understates the actual change since an increase in population slows traffic.
[63] This amount is based upon 250 working days per year, for an annual cost of about $500 per mile, yielding a present value at 5% interest of $10,000. See the section called “Present Value”. With a time value of $25 per hour and an average speed of 40 mph (1.5 minutes per mile), the time cost is 62.5 cents per minute. Automobile costs (such as gasoline, car depreciation, and insurance) are about 35–40 cents per mile. Thus the total is around $1 per mile, which doubles with roundtrips.

Citation Information
APA Format:McAfee, R. Preston., and Lewis, Tracy R.., Introduction to Economic Analysis. Retrieved Sep 2, 2010 from http://www.flatworldknowledge.com/node/29467 .
MLA Format:McAfee, R. Preston, , and Tracy R. Lewis. Introduction to Economic Analysis. 1969 . Flat World Knowledge. 2 Sep, 2010. <http://www.flatworldknowledge.com/node/29467> .
Chapter 13 Print–It–Yourself has been added to your cart for $1.99.
This book is not available for adoption
Adopt this book for your course
We are happy you want to adopt this Flat World Knowledge textbook for your course! You'll need to register as a user to get started.
Why? Registering allows you to post your course's information on our website so students can find their book, and gives you access to My(flat)World where you can keep track of all the books you adopt.
Are you a new user? Sign up here for free.
Adopt this book for your course
Thank you for your interest in adopting this book for your class. It is NOT YET PUBLISHED. When it is, you will click this button and:
Fill out a short adoption form. When you submit it, we will generate (and send to you) a URL that is unique to your class. That is where your students will go to get their free online book, or to purchase affordable alternatives.
You will also be able to print out this adoption form and bring it to the bookstore so that they can order and sell copies locally of the softcover print version.
This book is not available for customization
You must log in to customize textbooks.
New user? Sign up here for free, and give it a try.
Features:
Drag-and-drop chapters into a new table of contents that suits your syllabus. Resequence and delete down to the section level!
Even better: Annotate content at the paragraph level, giving you fine grained control over the content to suit your exact needs.
Another benefit: No more being forced to switch to new editions. Ever. You move to new editions when you have time and when you see merit. Not when we do.
We have more to do: More cool features in the works, like adding your own authored content, as well as editing existing content all the way to the sentence level. Stay tuned.
This book is not yet published. When it does, our customization features let you:
Drag-and-drop chapters into a new table of contents that suits your syllabus. Resequence and delete down to the section level!
Even better: Annotate content at the paragraph level, giving you fine grained control over the content to suit your exact needs.
Another benefit: No more being forced to switch to new editions. Ever. You move to new editions when you have time and when you see merit. Not when we do.
We have more to do: More cool features in the works, like adding your own authored content, as well as editing existing content all the way to the sentence level. Stay tuned.
Your book has already been saved for print.
You typically should not customize your book further. If your bookstore or students have already ordered the book they will not see your future changes.
If you choose to make further customizations you can do so by choosing 'customize' for this book from My Flatworld
This book does not have any Educator Supplements
Only approved educators have access to the supplements for this textbook. Please note: Educator access is manually approved within approximately 48 business hours after your registration.
If you already have an account and have been approved as an educator, then please login.
Are you a new user? Sign up for free.
You can also feel free to contact us regarding this matter.