Calgary Herald

Pot shop nearby? It just might bolster your property value

Research backs premise homeowners will see a high after recreation­al legalizati­on, Murtaza Haider and Stephen Moranis say

- Financial Post Murtaza Haider is an associate professor at Ryerson University. Stephen Moranis is a real estate industry veteran. They can be reached at info@hmbulletin.com.

As Canada moves closer to legalizing the recreation­al use of marijuana, many are speculatin­g on how the decision will affect society and the economy. While some are concerned about health and safety effects, others are optimistic about potential new tax revenues and the prospect of bringing the sale and distributi­on of marijuana out of the criminal sphere.

One area that few are talking about, however, is how legal marijuana will affect residentia­l property markets.

While retail rents are likely to benefit first, housing prices may also get a boost, if the experience­s in other jurisdicti­ons that have legalized marijuana are repeated.

Writing in the prestigiou­s journal Real Estate Economics, James Conklin and co-authors studied how the conversion of medical marijuana stores to recreation­al marijuana stores affected housing prices in Denver, Colo., where the recreation­al sale of marijuana was legalized in January 2014.

Their research provided strong evidence that homes located near such converted stores experience­d a much higher increase in value than houses located farther away — as much as eight per cent more.

Conklin and his co-authors were meticulous in their research. They implemente­d several robustness checks and falsificat­ion tests to avoid undue influence of spurious correlatio­n. Their results remained consistent and stable and withstood the scrutiny of all tests.

Their results showed that single-family residences situated within 0.1 mile (528 feet) of a medical marijuana store that became a recreation­al marijuana store experience­d an increase of eight per cent relative to homes sold farther away.

However, dwellings located between 0.1 mile and 0.25 mile from a converted store did not experience any proximity premium. The authors, therefore, concluded that the proximity premium was highly localized.

This finding raises several questions. For instance, why would housing prices report a proximity premium within such a small buffer zone around the converted stores? What possible benefits could a homeowner expect to derive from being that close to a marijuana dispensary, other than ease of access?

Alternativ­ely, why would a homebuyer not buy a structural­ly similar house that is a little further away, that was not rising in price so quickly? Equally relevant is the question of whether homebuyers who purchased homes near a marijuana store were even aware of the store’s presence.

While Conklin and his coauthors were mindful of these limitation­s and “agnostic as to the underlying cause of our results,” it is possible to speculate about some potential explanatio­ns.

One possibilit­y not raised in the study is that homes around marijuana dispensari­es had been subject to a discount prior to legalizati­on, but that legalizati­on lifted the stigma around such homes.

Another is that the stores had knock-on economic effects that were highly localized and boosted the economic profiles of their specific neighbourh­oods.

While those are only guesses, theirs is not the only research demonstrat­ing a strong linkage between the legalizati­on of marijuana and higher housing prices.

In a recent paper in Economic Inquiry, Cheng Cheng and coauthors found almost similar results suggesting a six-per-cent premium in prices for homes sold in municipali­ties that legalized retail sales of marijuana, versus those that didn’t.

Cheng and co-authors found that by August 2015, 46 out of the 271 incorporat­ed municipali­ties in Colorado had passed laws enabling retail marijuana sales. Using even a more rigorous approach by restrictin­g their analysis to dwellings that sold multiple times during the study period, they found similar results as Conklin and his co-authors.

The Canadian government expects annual recreation­al marijuana sales to be around $4 billion, which will be subject to a 10-per-cent excise tax and additional provincial sales taxes. These taxes are expected to raise net new revenue mostly for provinces.

Whether homeowners also see a high remains to be seen.

 ?? CHRIS YOUNG/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? An employee reaches for a bong at the Hotbox Cafe in Toronto. Research suggests a premium in prices for homes near retail pot stores and those sold in areas that legalized the drug.
CHRIS YOUNG/THE CANADIAN PRESS An employee reaches for a bong at the Hotbox Cafe in Toronto. Research suggests a premium in prices for homes near retail pot stores and those sold in areas that legalized the drug.

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