Thursday, September 27, 2012

School Labels & Housing Values: Potential consequences of NJDOE’s new arbitrary & capricious school ratings « School Finance 101

School Labels & Housing Values: Potential consequences of NJDOE’s new arbitrary & capricious school ratings « School Finance 101:


School Labels & Housing Values: Potential consequences of NJDOE’s new arbitrary & capricious school ratings

There exists relatively broad agreement in the empirical literature that perceived quality of local public goods and services – including local public schools – influences significantly the value – as represented in demand/sales prices – of residential property. In other words – perceived school quality affects housing prices and housing values. All else equal, one pays a premium to live in a school district or attendance zone within a district that is associated with a “good” school.
Indeed this “capitalization” of school quality (perceived or real) in home values is at the root of much of the disparity underlying highly residentially segregated state education systems. It’s a long run, complex chicken-egg cycle sort of thing. Some communities have more which allows them to spend more… to improve perceived quality… and capitalize that value into their homes/property values, increasing the town’s ability to raise revenue