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Estimating the Effect of Crime Risk on Property Values and Time on Market: Evidence from Megan's Law in Virginia
Authors:Scott Wentland  Bennie Waller  Raymond Brastow
Affiliation:College of Business & Economics, Longwood University, , Farmville, VA, 23909
Abstract:We examine neighborhood externalities that arise from the perceived risk associated with the proximity of a registered sex offender's residence. We find large negative externality effects on a property's price and liquidity, employing empirical techniques that include a fixed‐effects OLS model, a correction for sample selection bias and censoring using a Heckman treatment, and a three‐stage least‐squares model to account for simultaneity bias in the joint determination of a home's sale price and liquidity. Additionally, we find amplified effects for homes with more bedrooms (a proxy for children) and if the nearby offender is designated by the state as “violent.”
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