Abstract

‘Location, location, location’ is a real property parlance mostly used to describe the influence of location in the property market. Location is mainly considered as the most significant influencer of commercial property prices. Location is modelled traditionally using hedonic pricing model by either proxy location dummies or distances relative to other neighbourhood features. This was shown to be inadequate due to spatial autocorrelation and heterogeneity inherent in spatial data, which jeopardises the estimates' consistency. Consequently, spatial econometrics is used to explicitly model location into property pricing by controlling spatial effects of autocorrelation and heterogeneity. Housing studies dominate the use of this approach with limited application in the commercial property market. This paper reviewed spatial econometrics and found that the commercial property market exhibits significant spatial dependence and heterogeneity. Accounting for such effects improves model accuracy significantly. It, therefore, recommends increase use of spatial econometrics in commercial property market modelling.

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