Abstract

The current study argues that the capitalisation effect of urban public facilities on housing will be considerable when the accessibility or availability of facilities has a serious stake in the location or property rights of houses. The supply level and supply quantity of urban public facilities determine whether there is a significant difference in the accessibility or availability of facilities amongst neighbourhoods, and subsequently determines whether the capitalisation effect of facilities on surrounding houses is considerable, which ultimately affects the spatial inequality in housing prices (i.e. spatial dispersion of housing prices). However, previous studies have rarely considered the fact that the supply and demand of urban public facilities vary with the type of facilities. Thus, according to the law of diminishing marginal utility, the current study proposes a theoretical framework for the impact of the allocation of urban public facilities at different supply levels on the spatial inequity in housing prices and verifies this through a case study. Results indicate that the difference in urban public facility allocation caused by the unequal supply quantity or unbalanced spatial distribution has a notable impact on the spatial inequality in housing prices. There are three states of allocation of urban public facilities available according to different supply levels, namely, disequilibrium, quantitative equilibrium and spatial equilibrium:(І) Scarce and high-quality public resources that may always be in the disequilibrium state create a substantial capitalisation effect on nearby housing, and their presence will aggravate spatial inequality in housing prices; (П) Public facilities that can only reach the quantitative equilibrium state have a considerable capitalisation effect on nearby housing, and their supply densities have a positive impact on the spatial inequality in housing prices; (Ш) Public facilities in the spatial equilibrium state have a negligible capitalisation effect on nearby housing, and their supply densities have a negative impact on the spatial inequality in housing prices. Therefore, it is reasonable to argue that urban public facilities at different supply levels have a diversified impact on the housing market. This study can contribute to having a comprehensive and in-depth understanding of the diversified impact of urban public facilities on the housing market.

Highlights

  • Urban public facilities are the carriers of urban public services, which are related to the shaping of the urban environment and spatial structure as well as the normal operation of urban systems [1]

  • The theoretical framework proposed in the current study can help form a systematic and thorough understanding of the impact of differences in urban public facility allocation on spatial inequality in housing prices: (I) For scarce and high-quality public resources that might always be in the disequilibrium state, their presence will aggravate spatial inequality in housing prices. (II) For facilities that can only achieve the quantitative equilibrium, their supply densities have a positive impact on the variation of housing prices. (III) For facilities that reach spatial equilibrium, their supply densities have a negative impact on the spatial inequality in housing prices

  • The current study proposes a comprehensive and systematic theoretical framework for the impact of urban public facility allocation at different supply levels on spatial inequality in housing prices, which is verified by a case study

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Summary

Introduction

Urban public facilities are the carriers of urban public services, which are related to the shaping of the urban environment and spatial structure as well as the normal operation of urban systems [1]. The unequal supply of some public facilities and unbalanced layout of high-quality public resources make it difficult for citizens to acquire equal access to these facilities. This makes facilities with strong positive externality increase the value of local housing [3], thereby leading to spatial non-stationary of the housing market. What remains to be explored is how to systematically and comprehensively learn the capitalisation effect of urban public facilities (this study focuses on urban public facilities with positive externality, including urban public service facilities, urban infrastructure and urban natural landscape resources) at various supply levels on spatial inequality in housing prices. The current study aims to propose and solve the following two major problems

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