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 How Aggregate Investment AffectsLocation Rents in a Regional Market
Harry Pollard and Edward J. Dodson
 [An exchange of views that occurred 24 and 25
          October, 2011.]
 
 
 HarryAs you may know, I don't agree that improvements
          increase Rent (or its sale price - land-value). Rather, I think that
          improvements take advantage of existing Rent. When rent is high
          enough, something may be built to take advantage of it.
 
 EdIndividual improvements will not increase the rental
          value of locations in a given area, but aggregate investment in
          improvements -- both public and private -- certainly will, except at
          the point where a regional economic downturn pulls down property
          prices.
 
 HarryIn the case of 'gentrification', rent is high enough
          to make an existing improvement a poor user of its potential. So they
          clear everyone out and 'improve' the improvement to make it attractive
          for a more well-to-do clientele to take advantage of the rent.
 
 EdYes. That is exactly what happens. Apartment rents are
          raised to the point that lower income renters cannot absorb the
          increases. Often properties that had at some point in the past been
          converted from single-family to apartments are purchased by developers
          or individuals, modernized and returned to single family use. Thus,
          there is a net loss of housing units in the neighborhood.
 
 HarryI suppose it's on all fours with the pressure of
          rising rents on house construction. If one has a $1 million dollar
          lot, one is forced to build a large mansion to make the sale
          attractive. People won't pay $1.200,000 for a small house. I suspect
          the Georgian Quarter is an example of improving enough to make the
          high rent (price) palatable.
 
 EdUnless zoning permits the construction of more than one
          dwelling unit for the land parcel. Or, a builder is able to obtain a
          variance to existing permitted densities.
 
 HarryDeferring property tax payments for older people is
          something that is often done here. In the case of LVT, it's a one-off
          routine that would happen only during the changeover to common sense.
 
 EdDeferral as a circuit breaker might still be required IF
          community leaders and members desire to minimize wholesale
          displacement. One frequent issue is whether the definition of
          community requires significant diversity.
 
 HarryYou suggested that "aggregate investment in
          improvements" would increase rents. My thought is that such
          investment will redirect rent. About 50 years ago, the Farmer brothers
          in Toronto suggested that total rent in the city remain the same for a
          given community. Changes in the community would change rent.) I
          remember discussing this with Mase a long time ago and we both agreed
          that this was unlikely. I've come back to that idea and think that
          activities within the city may "relocate" rent rather than
          increase it. Thus, infrastructure that allows easy access to the
          central city may send rent there at the expense of the outskirts.
 I explain this in class by using the following story.
 
 A great new entertainment center is built in the downtown. It has
          cinemas, restaurants, fitness centers -- the lot!
 
 Hundreds of thousands of people use this wonderful complex, coming
          from all over the city. This influx raises rents around the complex
          and small businesses start up around it. It certainly looks as if this
          improvement has increased rents.
 
 However, as most people are now heading downtown, rents in the
          outskirts go down. Movie houses have trouble filling their seats,
          restaurants have empty tables and have survival problems. Essentially,
          rent has been moved downtown.
 
 Then a dangerous virus strikes and its location is determined to be
          the great entertainment complex. Some people die, many are sick, and
          nobody will go near the place. The rent, which depends on the presence
          and access of people, has fallen. The local small businesses are in
          serious trouble. Rent has fallen, but their payments to the landlord
          are not reduced. (Landlords will do anything rather than cut their
          rentals.)
 
 It should be noted that rents within the complex have also fallen
          even though the payments demanded have not. This suggests that the
          term 'rent' should be used to describe a value that attaches to a
          location rather than to any payments that may be made to the community
          or to a private individual.
 
 Meantime, movie houses, restaurants, and other services in the
          outskirts are doing well for people have returned! Their rents (the
          value that attaches to their locations) have increased. That is, the
          services that own their locations. It is likely that those who rent
          are already gone. As we know, even though rents diminish, any drop in
          payments to landlords is very sticky to say the least. This is why a
          city has an abundance of vacant premises.
 
 At last, the problem is solved. The downtown complex gets a good bill
          of health, people return and along with them rent.
 
 Such a scenario would indicate that improvements -- even in aggregate
          don't create rent but rather take advantage of it.
 
 An often cited case is the good school which "raises" rent.
          I would suggest that when a good school becomes evident, it would
          attract people to an area. With the influx comes an increase in rent.
 
 I suppose that once again I've thrown the cat among the pigeons, but
          perhaps we should do a little more throwing with that cat.
 
 
 
 POSTSCRIPT
 EdIn the scenario you describe, the regional economy
          amounts to a "zero sum game" - for every winning
          neighborhood or district there is a corresponding loser. In the real
          world, regions tend to gain or lose total population because of more
          complex and changing social, economic and political circumstances.
 The aggregate investment I refer to includes the full network of
          public goods and services that enable people to take advantage of
          other public and private goods and services. The experience of most of
          the large cities in the United States proves the point, I think.
          Cities began to lose population to outlying areas because the
          construction of limited access highways between cities created links
          with rural roadways. The definition of distance was changed from miles
          to minutes. Developers grasped the pent-up demand for housing units
          with modern amenities, subdivisions went up with factory-like
          efficiency, and the residential communities created demand for all
          manner of new public and private goods and services. As one would
          predict, the location rental values in the new suburbs climbed and
          kept climbing. And, in the cities, the location rental values fell but
          not universally. Even where the cities experienced a net loss in
          population, only in those cities where the entire region lost
          population did the location rental values in the central business
          districts decline.
 
 The set of circumstances you describe, Harry, are, while
          hypothetically possible, require conditions not very likely to occur
          in the real world. One final comment, Harry, in response to your
          statement "that the term 'rent' should be used to describe a
          value that attaches to a location rather than to any payments that may
          be made to the community or to a private individual" certain
          additional issues require clarification. That
          rent is a good term to describe the value attached to a
          location over a specific period of time is pretty good. We
          know as well that rent exists whether actually exchanged or
          merely potential, and regardless of whether the location is held by a
          community, a private entity or an individual. The way I explain the
          concept of rent to students is: "rent is that portion of
          the material goods we produce that is claimed because some locations
          have advantages - natural or created by human activity -- over others
          in any specific area, as small as a city block or as large as the
          ocean."
 
 
 
 
 
 
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