{"id":25826,"date":"2015-09-14T14:59:03","date_gmt":"2015-09-14T18:59:03","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/biznews.fiu.edu\/?p=25826"},"modified":"2016-08-04T11:54:28","modified_gmt":"2016-08-04T15:54:28","slug":"will-shifting-sands-shift-costs-of-a-seaside-home-fiu-researcher-eli-beracha-finds-results","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/biznews.fiu.edu\/2015\/09\/will-shifting-sands-shift-costs-of-a-seaside-home-fiu-researcher-eli-beracha-finds-results\/","title":{"rendered":"Will shifting sands shift costs of a seaside home? FIU researcher Eli Beracha finds results."},"content":{"rendered":"
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Do people tend to ignore looming problems until the wolf \u2013 or in this case, the ocean \u2013 is just outside the door? That may be the case, at least when it comes to certain pricey beach-front property, according to research by Eli Beracha, assistant professor at FIU\u2019s Tibor and Shelia Hollo School of Real Estate.<\/p>\n
Beracha, who teaches in the Master of Science in International Real Estate program at the College of Business, and fellow researchers correlated home prices with erosion rates in a seaside community in Dare County, North Carolina.<\/p>\n
The results, which will appear a paper titled \u201cThe Capitalization of Land Erosion in Housing Pricing\u201d in The Journal of Real Estate Literature<\/em>, show that buyers are willing to pay top dollar for desirable ocean front property \u2013 even when predictable beach erosion means the sea will come creeping over time.<\/p>\n Prices only drop when the water is actually fairly close to the house. Beracha and his colleagues discovered that people paid little attention to the shrinking distance between the coast and a home until it was clear that the building might be at great flood risk.<\/p>\n