Wednesday, April 1, 2009

property rights are weakest in Vietnam and strongest in Singapore and Hong Kong

TO BE NOTED: From Richard's Real Estate and Urban Economics Blog:

"Property Rights and Property Values in Asia

Global Property Guide is a wonderful web site with lots of fun facts about property markets around the world. I was looking through its data this morning in order to get information for a project I am doing at the moment, and I couldn't help but draw a plot:





The X axis is a measure of property rights by country: property rights are weakest in Vietnam and strongest in Singapore and Hong Kong. Note the correlation. Even though the property rights index is only ordinal, it has a correlation of .78 with the price per square meter of a 120 square meter flat in the national and or financial capital of each country.

On the one hand, one would expect freer property rights to encourage productivity, and therefore produce higher incomes which would leads to higher prices. On the other hand, stronger property rights should also make housing supply more elastic, and therefore reduce property values.

India is (as is often the case) the outlier here: property rights are not strong, but prices are very high. Indeed, the price of a flat in Mumbai, where per capita PPP income is at about 1/6 the US's, is comparable to Manhattan, and much more expensive than Los Angeles. But Indian policy has fettered housing construction over the years, and Mumbai is the financial and cultural capital of India, so its very high prices (especially in context) should not be surprising.

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