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  2. Cornell Peter and Stephanie Nolan School of Hotel Administration
  3. Cornell Real Estate Review
  4. CRER Vol. 13 (2015)
  5. Can Short-Term Rental Arrangements Increase Home Values? A Case for AirBNB and Other Home Sharing Arrangements

Can Short-Term Rental Arrangements Increase Home Values? A Case for AirBNB and Other Home Sharing Arrangements

File(s)
Jefferson_Jones.pdf (346.84 KB)
Permanent Link(s)
https://hdl.handle.net/1813/70756
Collections
CRER Vol. 13 (2015)
Author
Jefferson-Jones, Jamila
Abstract

The sharing economy or “new economy”1 has redefined consumption in the housing context in a manner that impacts traditional notions regarding home values and neighborhood integrity. Housing sharing allows owners to share some of the benefits of property ownership – namely use and enjoyment2 – while shifting some of the burdens of ownership – particularly, the economic burdens. With the advent of the sharing economy, there is a brewing conflict between this new economy and the realities of economic regulation. Thus, in the housing context, we see this conflict playing out in the tension between growing patterns of home sharing and existing regulations that prohibit such sharing. Many state and local governments, relying on their inherent police powers, regulate short-term housing. In particular, certain land use legislation overtly prohibits occupation by short-term renters. One prominent justification for such prohibitions is the maintenance of property values and neighborhood character.

Volume & Issue
Vol.13
Date Issued
2015-06-01
Keywords
Cornell
•
real estate
•
rental
•
short-term
•
AirBNB
•
home sharing
•
sharing economy
•
new economy
•
home values
•
property ownership
•
economic regulation
•
regulation
•
short-term housing
•
land use regulation
•
housing prohibition
•
value preservation
•
short-term lease
•
lease
•
renewal
•
lodging
•
timeshare
•
inn
•
hotel
•
housing cooperative
•
affordability
•
housing scarcity
•
technology
•
restrictions
•
New York City
•
Supreme Court
•
zoning restrictions
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full prohibition
•
geographically-based restrictions
•
quantitative restrictions
•
proximity restrictions
•
operational restrictions
•
licensing requirements
•
condemnation
•
inverse condemnation
•
regulatory takings
•
private property
•
constructive taking
•
occupancy
•
taxation
•
public safety
•
neighborhood character
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Multiple Dwelling Law
•
permanent occupancy
•
Attorney General
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Eric Schneiderman
•
commercial user
•
Arun Sundararajan
•
California
•
Carmel-by-the-Sea
•
hotel revenue
•
lodging industry
•
mortgage
•
burden of homeownership
•
blight mitigation
•
community character
•
property values
Rights
Required Publisher Statement: © Cornell University. Reprinted with permission. All rights reserved.
Type
article

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