School quality as a catalyst for bidding wars and new housing development
利用亚特兰大学区边界重新划分带来的学校质量冲击,发现被划入更好学校的房屋更易引发竞价战,未开发地块也更可能被开发,同时房价和上市时间也受影响。
Abstract We provide new evidence of the demand for better schools as manifested in bidding wars and changes to the built environment. Using repeat sales before and after a redistricting, we exploit shocks to school quality arising from the continuous, unexpected redistricting of school attendance boundaries in Atlanta. We find that houses redistricted to higher (lower) quality schools are more (less) likely to be involved in a market‐driven bidding war. Similarly, undeveloped, redistricted parcels that receive a positive (negative) school quality shock are more (less) likely to be developed. School quality shocks also have a causal effect on house prices and time‐on‐market.