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Estimating Preferences for Neighborhood Amenities Under Imperfect Information
Author(s) -
Fernando A. F. Ferreira,
Maisy Wong
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
nber working paper series
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Reports
DOI - 10.3386/w28165
Subject(s) - imperfect , perfect information , econometrics , economics , computer science , geography , statistics , mathematics , microeconomics , philosophy , linguistics
This paper presents a new framework to estimate preferences for neighborhoods in the presence of individual imperfect information about every amenity in each neighborhood. We estimate the model with data from a new neighborhood choice program that provided information about market rents and same-school network, and collected neighborhood rankings for the same individual before and after receiving information. We find that switchers - who change rankings after the information intervention - increase network shares by 1.46 percentage points and decrease rents by $430. This variation from the panel data of individual rankings is critical to produce a latent quality index that addresses biases arising from imperfect information. Estimates from the neighborhood sorting model reveal a strong negative marginal utility of rents, and a positive marginal willingness to pay of $123 per month to live in a neighborhood with a larger network. Finally, information also influenced residential choices after graduation.

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