Affiliation:
1. University of Arizona
2. University of California, Santa Barbara, and the National Bureau of Economic Research
Abstract
Abstract
How do climate risk beliefs affect coastal housing markets? This paper provides theoretical and empirical evidence. First, we build a dynamic housing market model and show that belief heterogeneity can reconcile prior mixed evidence on flood risk capitalization. Second, we implement a door-to-door survey in Rhode Island, finding significant flood risk underestimation and sorting based on risk perceptions and amenity values. Third, we estimate that coastal prices exceed fundamentals by 6$\%$-13$\%$ in our benchmark area, with potentially higher overvaluation in other locations. Finally, we quantify both allocative inefficiency and distributional consequences arising from flood risk misperceptions and insurance policy reform.
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Subject
Economics and Econometrics,Finance,Accounting
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