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Financialisation, the valuation of investment property and the urban built environment in the UK
The financialisation literature has been criticised for its limited empirical base and its failure adequately to link the everyday world with that of high finance. The paper addresses these shortcomings by examining the calculative practice of property valuation. The way that valuations are performed affects their results and, therefore, the operation of the property market. The paper traces the evolving influence of finance capital on the valuation of commercial property in the UK by constructing a historiography of investment valuation since 1960. Traditional approaches to valuation have been increasingly challenged by those derived from financial economics. However, the former remains the dominant method for undertaking market valuation. Its grounding in comparison -- a centring and standardising process -- offers an explanation for some of the changes in the urban built environment that are ascribed to financialisation. This suggests that a more detailed and historically sensitive interpretation of financialisation is required. [web URL: http://usj.sagepub.com/content/53/7/1424.abstract]
Financialisation, the valuation of investment property and the urban built environment in the UK
The financialisation literature has been criticised for its limited empirical base and its failure adequately to link the everyday world with that of high finance. The paper addresses these shortcomings by examining the calculative practice of property valuation. The way that valuations are performed affects their results and, therefore, the operation of the property market. The paper traces the evolving influence of finance capital on the valuation of commercial property in the UK by constructing a historiography of investment valuation since 1960. Traditional approaches to valuation have been increasingly challenged by those derived from financial economics. However, the former remains the dominant method for undertaking market valuation. Its grounding in comparison -- a centring and standardising process -- offers an explanation for some of the changes in the urban built environment that are ascribed to financialisation. This suggests that a more detailed and historically sensitive interpretation of financialisation is required. [web URL: http://usj.sagepub.com/content/53/7/1424.abstract]
Financialisation, the valuation of investment property and the urban built environment in the UK
Neil Crosby (author) / John Henneberry
Urban studies ; 53
2016
Article (Journal)
English
Taylor & Francis Verlag | 2019
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