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Hong Kong housing markets: Overview, tenure choice, and housing demand

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Abstract

This paper presents an overview of housing markets and a cross-sectional analysis of housing demand in Hong Kong. Disturbances from political events have produced price upheavals in property prices; long-term inflation and low interest rates provide a strong stimulus for a sustained price surge in the housing market. Household income seems to have relatively little bearing on recent development in the market, especially when demand for housing has become more investment-oriented.

With the data from the 1991 Population Census of Hong Kong, we find in the cross-section study that permanent and transitory incomes, rather than current income, provide better estimates in the tenure choice equation. The results also indicate that family size and the number of elderly persons affects ownership. Renter expenditure and tenure choice decisions are linked by using the two-stage estimation procedure of Lee and Trost (1978). No correlation was found between renter expenditure and tenure choice. Further, the two-stage approach does not seem to be superior to the OLS approach in the estimation of the rental expenditure equations.

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Chou, W.L., Shih, Y.C. Hong Kong housing markets: Overview, tenure choice, and housing demand. J Real Estate Finan Econ 10, 7–21 (1995). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01099608

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