
Volume 27, Number 1, 2005 of the Journal of Real Estate Research
Ski Resort Real Estate: Does Supply
prevent Appreciation?
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William C. Wheaton
Department of Economics and the
Center for Real Estate
MIT
Cambridge, Mass 02139 |
Abstract: This paper
examines the behavior of ski resort property in a major New England
market over the last 25 years. A constructed property price series
reveals that nominal prices are quite volatile and only slightly higher
today than in 1980. These fluctuations and trends are investigated with a
time series VAR model. The findings indicate that (1) natural snowfall is
crucial to business;
(2) regional annual business is central to individual resort demand and
hence price appreciation; and (3) resort supply responds so elastically
to any movement in prices, that it effectively curtails any long-term
property appreciation. Impulse responses reveal that positive demand
shocks fail to generate any long-term (real) price appreciation because
of excessive new development. This behavior could be typical of many
other ski resorts.

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