In this paper, we provide an estimate of the impact of money laundering on residential house market prices. The housing market is commonly exploited by criminal organizations to clean illegal profits. The increase in demand due to money laundering contrasts the negative externality of crime on house prices, which has been investigated by a large literature. We build a new dataset on residential house prices at the provincial level in Italy over the period 2005-2012, obtaining a sample of 672 observations. We then estimate a hedonic equilibrium price model, controlling for proxies both for illegal profits derived from "entrepreneurial" crimes (drug dealing, receiving stolen goods, prostitution) and for violent crimes (extortions), together with traditional market drivers. Adding to the evidence from the traditional literature, which remarks the negative impact of crime on house prices, our findings suggest that money laundering from "entrepreneurial" crimes creates an upward distortion in the housing market prices. The impact is stronger where retail markets for illicit trades are richer.

Novaro, R., Piacenza, M., Turati, G., Does money laundering inflate residential house prices? Evidence from the Italian provincial markets, <<KYKLOS>>, 2022; 75 (4): 672-691. [doi:10.1111/kykl.12306] [https://hdl.handle.net/10807/232049]

Does money laundering inflate residential house prices? Evidence from the Italian provincial markets

Turati, Gilberto
2022

Abstract

In this paper, we provide an estimate of the impact of money laundering on residential house market prices. The housing market is commonly exploited by criminal organizations to clean illegal profits. The increase in demand due to money laundering contrasts the negative externality of crime on house prices, which has been investigated by a large literature. We build a new dataset on residential house prices at the provincial level in Italy over the period 2005-2012, obtaining a sample of 672 observations. We then estimate a hedonic equilibrium price model, controlling for proxies both for illegal profits derived from "entrepreneurial" crimes (drug dealing, receiving stolen goods, prostitution) and for violent crimes (extortions), together with traditional market drivers. Adding to the evidence from the traditional literature, which remarks the negative impact of crime on house prices, our findings suggest that money laundering from "entrepreneurial" crimes creates an upward distortion in the housing market prices. The impact is stronger where retail markets for illicit trades are richer.
2022
AREA13 - SCIENZE ECONOMICHE E STATISTICHE
Articolo su rivista presente in almeno un database (EconLit, MatScinet, Scopus, Web of Knowledge, Publish or perish)
Inglese
Articolo in rivista
Inglese
money laundering
residential house market
Italy
Settore SECS-P/03 - SCIENZA DELLE FINANZE
WILEY
75
4
2022
672
691
20
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Novaro, R., Piacenza, M., Turati, G., Does money laundering inflate residential house prices? Evidence from the Italian provincial markets, <<KYKLOS>>, 2022; 75 (4): 672-691. [doi:10.1111/kykl.12306] [https://hdl.handle.net/10807/232049]
none
262
Novaro, R; Piacenza, M; Turati, Gilberto
3
art_per_29
03. Contributo in rivista::Articolo in rivista, Nota a sentenza
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10807/232049
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