Real Estate Value as a Co-determinant of Housing Choice Optimality: The Nigerian Experience

IA Olatunji, I Ojetunde, HS Liman, Muhammed Bolomope

    Research output: Contribution to conferenceUnpublished paper

    Abstract

    Paper presented at the 26th Annual Pacific Rim Real Estate Society Conference

    This paper examined the impact of real estate value as well as the impacts of 4 other pertinent variables (household income, commuting cost, workplace distance and household activity pattern) on housing choice optimality, HcO. Utilizing a sample of 107 purposively selected middle income households in Abuja and Minna, the study employed regression analysis to explore the intuition that real estate value is related to HcO. The results showed that the housing optimality model has a fair predictive explanation of approximately 57% - 77% for the explanatory variables. Findings from the study also revealed that real estate value with the other variables influence housing choice optimality, although the magnitude of such influence varies across the two cities. As such,
    real estate value represents a burden which households must bear in order to secure the right to an apartment of choice. It is concluded that given the real estate value, the consequential housing choice optimality, could be predicted across different housing markets in Nigeria.
    Original languageEnglish
    Publication statusPublished - 2020
    Event26th Annual Pacific Rim Real Estate Society Conference - Canberra, Canberra, Australia, Australia
    Duration: 19 Jan 202022 Jan 2020

    Conference

    Conference26th Annual Pacific Rim Real Estate Society Conference
    Country/TerritoryAustralia
    City Canberra, Australia
    Period19/01/2022/01/20

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