Two centuries of farmland prices in England

Jadevicius, A, Huston, Simon, Baum, A and Butler, Allan (2017) Two centuries of farmland prices in England. Journal of Property Research, 2018, 35 (1). pp. 72-94.

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Abstract

The dissemination of robust asset price data can help improve market efficiency, resource allocation and investment analysis. Land prices influence housing affordability, food security and the carbon infrastructure. Yet price and return histories for farmland in England are fragmented. To provide perspective, a long farmland price series is needed to improve transparency and bring the asset class into line with commercial and residential real estate. After reviewing the historical backdrop and considering methodology, this research uses a chain-linking approach to construct a long-term farmland price series for England. It then adjusts the series for inflation to examine real land prices. The resulting two-century English farmland prices series contributes to farmland market analysis. Notwithstanding some concerns with long-run chain component heterogeneity, the combined series helps us to understand English average farmland price dynamics. As measured by the geometric mean, English land price real capital returns have been positive over more than two centuries. Farmland real price growth was 0.33 per cent annually from 1781 to 2013 and 0.71 per cent from 1801 to 2013. The series contributes to an understanding of land price dynamics. Sir, – In these times, when the rental and marketable value of land

Item Type: Article
Divisions: Real Estate and Land Management
Depositing User: Lynn Seager
Date Deposited: 19 Apr 2018 14:23
Last Modified: 07 Oct 2022 15:48
URI: https://rau.repository.guildhe.ac.uk/id/eprint/16057

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