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100 _aLi, Huiping
_931896
245 _aLocal Public Expenditure, Public Service Accessibility, and Housing Price in Shanghai, China
260 _bSage
_c2019
300 _aVol 55, Issue 1, 2019 : (148-184 p.)
520 _aThe level of public service accessibility differs by residential locations. Existing literature has documented the effects of public service accessibility on housing prices. However, few studies have examined how public service provision affects housing prices under the Chinese centralized governance system. Using data from different geographic scales, this study uses a multilevel research design to examine how public service provision is associated with housing prices in Shanghai. Results show that though the total expenditure at the urban district level is not related to housing prices, government redistributive expenditure is positively associated with housing price and the developmental expenditure is on the opposite. The expenditure effects are further mediated by the accessibility to public facilities at the community level. The findings suggest that, as public service accessibility has been capitalized into housing prices, the decentralized fiscal system with relatively centralized governance structure may have reinforced urban polarization in Shanghai.
650 _alocal public expenditure, ,
_yhousing price
_933978
650 _apublic service accessibility
_933979
700 _aWang, Qingfang
_930414
700 _aDeng, Zhongwei
_933980
773 0 _010947
_915473
_dSage, 2019.
_tUrban affairs review
856 _uhttps://doi.org/10.1177/1078087417702504
942 _2ddc
_cART