Posted by David Bernstein:
For Those Following the DC-Area Housing Market:
http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2008_08_10-2008_08_16.shtml#1218856268


   A very [1]interesting debate in the comments section of the Northern
   Virginia Housing Bubble Fallout Blog over whether Arlington prices,
   which have held up reasonably well post-bubble, are likely to fall due
   to the "substitution effect". With housing prices having plummeted in
   the outer suburbs, will home buyers, for example, decide to buy a 200K
   home in Prince William County instead of a 700K home in close-in
   Arlington?

   My best guess, despite being an Arlington homeowner, is that Arlington
   is due for a fall. Arlington has many advantages, and the
   disproportionate rise in Arlington prices has some legitimate reasons,
   including how much nicer and safer DC has become, reasonably wise
   development policies in Arlington, and the general trend toward
   Yuppies wanting a more urban experience. But Arlington also has uneven
   schools, older housing stock, small lots, very high prices, and nasty
   traffic problems for those who need to commute west (like my
   brother-in-law, who spent an hour each way driving from Courthouse to
   Fairfax City each day, a fifteen to twenty-minute drive with no
   traffic), where the high-tech companies are located. At some point,
   marginal buyers will prefer neighborhoods in the outer burbs where
   prices are at 2002 levels (down 50% or so from the peak) to
   neighborhoods in Arlington where prices are still at 2004 levels (down
   10-15% from the peak).

References

   1. 
https://www.blogger.com/comment.g?blogID=4787878578920468587&postID=3624354304658493361

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