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Opened Jun 17, 2025 by Margarette Dangelo@margarettedang
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Othering and Belonging Institute (UC Berkeley)


Housing refers to a residential or commercial property including several shelter as a home. Real estate areas are occupied either by individuals or a collective group of people. Real estate is also referred to as a human requirement and human right, playing a crucial function in forming the quality of life for individuals, families, and communities. [1] As a result, the quality and type of real estate a private or collective inhabits plays a large role in real estate organization and real estate policy.

Overview

Real estate is a physical structure indented for house, lodging or shelter that homes people and offers them with a place to reside. Real estate includes a vast array of sub-genres from apartment or condos and homes to short-term shelters and emergency situation lodgings. [2] Access to safe, affordable, and steady real estate is essential for a person to attain optimal health, safety, and total well-being. Real estate impacts economic, social, and cultural chances as it is directly connected to education, work, healthcare, and social media networks. [citation needed] In many countries, real estate policies and programs have been established to resolve real estate concerns related to affordability, quality, and availability. [citation needed] These programs and policies are described as real estate authorities, also understood as a real estate ministry or real estate department.
realestatenews.com
Generally, there are 2 types of real estate, market real estate and non-market real estate. Market real estate describes real estate that is purchased and sold on the open market, with costs and lease figured out by supply and demand. [citation needed] Market real estate is owned by personal people or corporations and includes apartments, condos, private real estate, etc. [citation needed] Non-market real estate refers to real estate that is provided and managed by the federal government or non-profit companies. [citation needed] The goal of non-market real estate is to offer cost effective real estate for individuals or households considered low-income. [citation needed] Non-market real estate is subsidized, indicating that lease is lower than the market rate, and renters might be qualified for lease support programs. [3] Non-market real estate includes public, social, and cooperative real estate among others.

Macroeconomy and real estate rate

Real estate costs are impacted by the macroeconomy. [4] Research performed in 2018 shows that a 1% increase in the Consumer Price Index causes a $3,559,715 boost in real estate costs. As an outcome this raises the residential or commercial property cost per square foot by $119.3387. [citation needed] Money Supply (M2) has a positive relationship with real estate prices. A research study carried out in Hong Kong reported that as M2 increased by one unit, real estate rates rose by 0.0618. [citation required] When there is a 1% increase in the very best loaning rate, real estate costs drop between $18,237.26 and $28,681.17 in the HAC [which?] design. [citation needed] Mortgage repayments result in a rise in the discount rate window base rate. A 1% increase in the rate leads to a $14,314.69 drop in real estate prices, and an average asking price drop of $585,335.50. [citation needed] In the United States, when there is a 1% boost in the US real interest rate, the residential or commercial property rates reduce from $9302.845 to $4957.274, and sellable area stop by $4.955206 and $14.01284. When there is a 1% increase in over night Hong Kong Interbank Offered Rate, the real estate rates drop to about 3455.529, and the rate per ft2 will visit $187.3119. [5] [need quote to confirm]
Real estate affordability index

Real estate crisis

Health and real estate

Real estate is recognized as a social determinant of health. [citation required] While premium real estate environments favorably contribute to a person's health, bad real estate or a total absence thereof causes unfavorable health effects. Lack of real estate or poor-quality real estate can negatively impact an individual's physical and mental health. Real estate attributes that negatively affect physical health include moisture, mold, inadequate heating, and overcrowding. Mental health is likewise affected by insufficient heating, overcrowding, wetness, and mold, in addition to an absence of individual space. [13] Another factor that negatively affects psychological health is real estate instability. [14] Negative health impacts that affect children include possible exposure to asthma activates or lead, and injuries triggered by structural deficiencies (e.g. absence of window guards or radiator covers). [15]
Family members with poor health minimize debt to play it safe. Data from the China House Finance Survey used a partial least squares structural equation design for results that indicated relative's bad health and individuals with uninsured endowment insurance have a negative effect on real estate debt and family properties. [16]
By area

Real estate in Azerbaijan Real estate in Barbuda Real Estate in China Real Estate in Hong Kong
Real estate in Scotland


Affordable real estate Category: Real estate ministries Homeowner association Real estate association Housing estate Real estate First Informal real estate List of real estate statutes List of human habitation types NIMBY Right to real estate Subsidized real estate Urban preparation

  • US Federal Real Estate Administration YIMBY Zoning

Real estate website
References

^ "real estate". Oxford English Dictionary (Online ed.). Oxford University Press. (Subscription or taking part organization subscription required.). ^ Gwendolyn Wright, Building the Dream: A Social History of Real Estate in America (MIT press, 1983). ^ Haffner, Marietta E. A. (2009 ). Bridging the Gap Between Social and Market Rented Real Estate in Six European Countries?. IOS Press. pp. 4+. ISBN 978-1-60750-035-3. ^ Dept, Fund Research (2005-12-22). "Research Summaries: Real Estate Prices and Macroeconomics". IMF Research Bulletin. 2005 (4 ). doi:10.5089/ 9781451929980.026. A001 (inactive 1 June 2025). point out journal: CS1 maint: DOI non-active as of June 2025 (link). ^ Li, R.Y.M. (2018 ). "Have Real Estate Prices Gone with the Smelly Wind? Big Data Analysis on Landfill in Hong Kong". Sustainability. 10 (2 ): 341. Bibcode:2018 Sust ... 10..341 L. doi:10.3390/ su10020341. S2CID 158813714. ^ National Association of Realtors (2022-01-01). "Real Estate Affordability Index (Fixed)". FRED, Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis. Retrieved 2023-04-06. ^ "Property market: Definitions, graphs and data". www.bankofcanada.ca. Retrieved 2023-04-06. ^ Kenton, Will (September 30, 2022). "Affordability Index". Investopedia. Retrieved 2023-04-06. ^ Menendian, Stephen (November 30, 2022). "Deconstructing the 'Real Estate Crisis'". Othering and Belonging Institute (UC Berkeley). Retrieved 2023-12-30. ^ Potts, Deborah Helen (2020 ). Broken cities inside the international real estate crisis. London: Zed books. ISBN 978-1-78699-054-9. ^ Wetzstein, Steffen (2017-11-01). "The international city real estate affordability crisis" (PDF). Urban Studies. 54 (14 ): 3159-3177. doi:10.1177/ 0042098017711649. ISSN 0042-0980. ^ "What has triggered the global real estate crisis - and how can we repair it?". World Economic Forum. Archived from the initial on 2025-01-23. Retrieved 2025-01-31. ^ Rolfe, Steve; Garnham, Lisa; Godwin, Jon; Anderson, Isobel; Seaman, Pete; Donaldson, Cam (2020 ). "Real estate as a social factor of health and wellbeing: Developing an empirically-informed realist theoretical framework". BMC Public Health. 20 (1 ): 1138. doi:10.1186/ s12889-020-09224-0. PMC 7370492. PMID 32689966. ^ Li, Ang; Baker, Emma; Bentley, Rebecca (2022 ). "Understanding the mental health effects of instability in the personal rental sector: A longitudinal analysis of a nationwide mate". Social Science & Medicine. 296: 114778. doi:10.1016/ j.socscimed.2022.114778. PMID 35151148. S2CID 246614891. ^ Dunn, James R. (2020 ). "Real Estate and Healthy Child Development: Known and Potential Impacts of Interventions". Annual Review of Public Health. 41: 381-396. doi:10.1146/ annurev-publhealth-040119-094050. PMID 31874071. ^ Chen, S. et al Health, Insurance, and Social Capital's Effect on Real estate Debt and Assets Using a Partial Least Squares Structural Equation Modeling Technique. Buildings 2024, 14, 3540. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings14113540. External links

The dictionary meaning of real estate at Wiktionary

Media associated to Real estate at Wikimedia Commons. Media associated to Real estate at Wikimedia Commons. Shadwell, Arthur (1911 ). "Real estate". Encyclopædia Britannica.
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Reference: margarettedang/theofferco#1