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Paving streets for the poor: Experimental analysis of infrastructure effects

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posted on 2025-08-01, 00:04 authored by M Gonzalez-Navarro, C Quintana-Domeque
We provide the first experimental estimation of the effects of the supply of publicly financed urban infrastructure on property values. Using random allocation of first-time street asphalting of residential streets located in peripheral neighborhoods in Mexico, we show that within two years of the intervention, households are able to transform their increased property wealth into significantly larger rates of vehicle ownership, household appliances, and home improvements. Increased consumption is made possible by both credit use and less saving. A cost-benefit analysis indicates that the valuation of street asphalting as capitalized into property values is about as large as construction costs.

Funding

Berkeley Economics

ECO2011- 29751

Lincoln Institute of Land Policy

Princeton Industrial Relations Section

Princeton Research Program in Development Studies

Princeton University

Princeton Woodrow Wilson Scholars

Robert Wood Johnson Scholars in Health Policy Research Program

Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation

Universitat d’Alacant

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Rights

© 2016 by the President and Fellows of Harvard College and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Notes

This is the final version. Available from MIT Press via the DOI in this record

Journal

Review of Economics and Statistics

Publisher

Massachusetts Institute of Technology Press (MIT Press) / Harvard University, Kennedy School of Government

Version

  • Version of Record

Language

en

FCD date

2019-03-12T13:17:56Z

FOA date

2019-03-12T13:23:19Z

Citation

Vol. 98 (2), pp. 254 - 267

Department

  • Economics

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