Wong Grace
Wharton School of Business, University of Pennsylvania, 1463 Steinberg-Dietrich Hall, The Wharton School, 3620 Locust Walk, Philadelphia, PA 19104-6302, USA.
J Urban Econ. 2008 Jan;63(1):74-95. doi: 10.1016/j.jue.2006.12.007. Epub 2007 Feb 1.
This paper uses the 2003 Hong Kong Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS) epidemic as a natural experiment to investigate how housing markets react to extreme events. A panel data set of large-scale housing complexes (estates) is used to exploit the cross-sectional variation in the spread of SARS to estimate the effect of the disease on real estate prices and sales. SARS risk is measured by: (1) the estate-level SARS infection rate, (2) news reports, and (3) government announcements of infections. The average price declines by 1-3 percent if an estate is directly affected by SARS, and by 1.6 percent for all estates as a result of the outbreak of the disease. A back-of-the-envelope calculation of the expected price fall under the rational asset-pricing model implies that the economic value of life consistent with the SARS-related price movement was less than $1 million. This low figure contrasts with the predictions of overreaction from psychological and behavioral economics theories. An analysis of transaction volume suggests that the absence of price overreaction is likely to be related to housing market characteristics, including transaction costs, credit constraints and loss aversion.
本文将2003年香港严重急性呼吸系统综合症(SARS)疫情作为一项自然实验,以研究房地产市场如何应对极端事件。利用大型住宅小区(屋苑)的面板数据集,通过SARS传播的横截面差异来估计该疾病对房地产价格和销售的影响。SARS风险通过以下方式衡量:(1)屋苑层面的SARS感染率,(2)新闻报道,以及(3)政府发布的感染情况公告。若一个屋苑直接受到SARS影响,其平均价格会下降1%至3%,而由于该疾病爆发,所有屋苑的平均价格下降了1.6%。根据理性资产定价模型对预期价格下跌进行的粗略计算表明,与SARS相关价格变动相符的生命经济价值低于100万美元。这一低数值与心理和行为经济学理论中过度反应的预测形成对比。对交易量的分析表明,不存在价格过度反应可能与房地产市场特征有关,包括交易成本、信贷约束和损失厌恶。