Seminar and Conference Papers

C09-002
"Green Building, The Economy, and Public Policy"
Papers and Presentations from the December 2009 Symposium

C09-001
Housing Markets and the Economy: Risk, Regulation and Policy
Essays in Honor of Karl E. Case

Edward L. Glaeser and John M. Quigley, editors
Cambridge, MA: Lincoln Institute of Land Policy, 2009.

  1. Karl E. Case, Housing, and the Economy
    by Edward L. Glaeser and John M. Quigley
  2. Derivatives Markets for Home Prices
    by Robert J. Shiller
  3. Home Equity Insurance: A Pilot Project
    by Andrew Caplin, William Goetzmann, Eric Hangen, Barry Nalebuff, Elisabeth Prentice, John Rodkin, Tom Skinner, and Matthew Spiegel
  4. Spatial Variation in the Risk of Home Owning
    by Todd Sinai
  5. Arbitrage in Housing Markets
    by Edward L. Glaeser and Joseph Gyourko
  6. Subprime Mortgages: What, Where, and to Whom?
    by Chris Mayer and Karen Pence
  7. Government-Sponsored Enterprises, the Community Reinvestment Act, and Home Ownership in Targeted Underserved Neighborhoods
    by Stuart A. Gabriel and Stuart S. Rosenthal
  8. Siting, Spillovers, and Segregation: A Reexamination of the Low Income Housing Tax Credit Program
    by Ingrid Gouldellen, Katherine M. O'Regan, and Ioan Voicu
  9. Measuring Land Use Regulations and Their Effects in the Housing Market
    by John M. Quigley, Steven Raphael, and Larry A. Rosenthal
  10. Do Real Estate Agents Compete on Price? Evidence from Seven Metropolitan Areas
    by Ann B. Schnare and Robert Kulick
  11. The Dynamics of Job Creation and Destruction and the Size Distribution of Establishments
    by Nancy E. Wallace and Donald W. Walls

C07-007
Japanese Fiscal Burdens and Generational Accounting.
By Satoko Maekawa
Presented at the Japan-Berkeley Symposium on Local Public Economics,
February 2007, Berkeley, California.

C07-006
Fiscal Realities: Budget Tradeoffs in State and Local Government.
By Tracy Gordon
Presented at the Japan-Berkeley Symposium on Local Public Economics,
February 2007, Berkeley, California.

C07-005
Innovation and Imitation Across Jurisdictions.
By Amitai Glazer and Hiroki Kondo
Presented at the Japan-Berkeley Symposium on Local Public Economics,
February 2007, Berkeley, California.

C07-004
Soft-Budget Constraints and Local Expenditures.
By Takero Doi and Toshihiro Ihori
Presented at the Japan-Berkeley Symposium on Local Public Economics,
February 2007, Berkeley, California.

C07-003
Urban Extremism.
Jan K. Brueckner and Amitai Glazer
Presented at the Japan-Berkeley Symposium on Local Public Economics,
February 2007, Berkeley, California.

C07-002
Urbanization, Productivity and Innovation: Evidence From Investment in Higher Education.
By Roland Andersson, John M. Quigley, and Mats Wilhelmsson
Presented at the Japan-Berkeley Symposium on Local Public Economics,
February 2007, Berkeley, California.

C07-001
Fiscal Decentralization and Educational Performance.
By Nobuo Akai, Masayo Sakata, and Ryuichi Tanaka
Presented at the Japan-Berkeley Symposium on Local Public Economics,
February 2007, Berkeley, California.

C01-009
NIMBYs and Knowledge: Urban Regulation and the 'New Economy.'
by Stephen Malpezzi, May 2001.
NOTE: Click here to download papers and presentations from the November 1, 2002 UC-Berkeley Conference on "Census 2000: Growing Together or Apart? Population Trends and Their Implications for Cities and Metropolitan Areas."

C01-008
Automated Underwriting and Lending Outcomes: The Effect of Improved Mortgage Risk Assessment on Under-Served Populations.
by Peter Zorn, Susan Gates, and Vanessa Gail Perry, August 2001.

C01-007
Does a High Tech Boom Worsen Housing Problems for Working Families?
by Roberto G. Quercia, Michael A. Stegman, and Walter R. Davis, July 2001.

C01-006
New Tools for Simulating Housing Choices.
by Paul M. Torrens, Presented at the Housing and New Economy Conference, American Real Estate and Urban Economics Association MidYear Meetings, May 31, 2001, Washington, D.C.
A revised version of this paper will appear in Housing Policy Debate, 13(2) in 2002.

C01-005
Housing Needs and Policy Issues in High Tech Economies.
by Kathryn P. Nelson, July 2001 rev.
Presented at the Housing and New Economy Conference, American Real Estate and Urban Economics Association MidYear Meetings, May 31, 2001, Washington, D.C.
A revised version of this paper will appear in Housing Policy Debate, 13(2) in 2002.

C01-004
The New Demographics of Housing.
by George S. Masnick, June 2001 rev.
Presented at the Housing and New Economy Conference, American Real Estate and Urban Economics Association MidYear Meetings, May 31, 2001, Washington, D.C.
A revised version of this paper will appear in Housing Policy Debate, 13(2) in 2002.

C01-003
The New Economy and Housing Market Outcomes.
by John Landis, Vicki Elmer, and Matt Zook.
Presented at the Housing and New Economy Conference, American Real Estate and Urban Economics Association MidYear Meetings, May 31, 2001, Washington, D.C.
A revised version of this paper will appear in Housing Policy Debate, 13(2) in 2002.

C01-002
Does the New Economy Drive the Santa Clara County Housing Market?
by Richard K. Green.
Presented at the Housing and New Economy Conference, American Real Estate and Urban Economics Association MidYear Meetings, May 31, 2001, Washington, D.C.
A revised version of this paper will appear in Housing Policy Debate, 13(2) in 2002.

C01-001
Subprime and Predatory Mortgage Refinancing: Information Technology, Credit Scoring, and Vulnerable Borrowers.
by Dennis E. Gale.
Presented at the Housing and New Economy Conference, American Real Estate and Urban Economics Association MidYear Meetings, May 31, 2001, Washington, D.C.
A revised version of this paper will appear in Housing Policy Debate, 13(2) in 2002.

S00-004
Neutral Property Taxation.
by Richard Arnott, January 2000.

S00-003
An Empirical Analysis of the Cause of Neighborhood Racial Segregation.
by Keith Ihlanfeldt and Benjamin P. Scafidi, January 2000.

S00-002
Housing Vouchers and Economic Self-Sufficiency: Evidence from a Randomized Experiment.
by Jens Ludwig, January 2000.

S00-001
Modelling Housing Choice and Demand in a Social Housing System: The Case of Glasgow.
by Kenneth Gibb, January 2000.

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