A literature review on
housing market using diagramming techniques
Joseph Kim-keung Ho
Independent
Trainer
Hong Kong, China
Dated: May 10, 2016
Abstract:
The topic of using diagrams to conduct literature
review is not novel. The research angle in this paper is slightly different. It
presents an account on how diagramming-based literature review can be conducted
as complementary to scholarly essay-form of literature review. The diagramming
techniques employed included mind mapping, systems mapping and cognitive
mapping. The review topic in this case is housing market. Besides confirming
the observations made by an earlier paper by the writer on employability (Ho, 2016a),
this paper also discusses how diagramming-based literature review is relevant
to managerial intellectual learning, another research project launched by the
writer (Ho, 2013; 2014a; 2014b). In this respect, the study offers some novelty
as an academic work on literature review and managerial intellectual learning.
Keywords:
diagramming techniques, housing market, literature review, managerial
intellectual learning
Introduction
In
dissertation projects done by tertiary education students, literature review
has always been a struggle for most students, based the writer’s long-time
teaching experience. In Ho (2015), the writer argues that difficulties on the
students’ part to conduct literature review reflect students’ ineffective
intellectual learning. In a more recent work on literature review, Ho (2016a)
explored usage of diagramming techniques to carry out literature review on
employability, which he argued to be more engaging and stimulating than solely
relying on scholarly essay writing skills. This paper follows the same approach
to conduct literature review, this time on the subject of housing market.
Specifically, the objectives of the paper are to:
Objective 1:
to improve understanding, via a hands-on exercise, on how literature review can
be facilitated by diagramming techniques.
Objective 2:
to render a more vivid intellectual landscape on the subject of housing market via
literature review with diagramming techniques.
The
study in this paper is expected to offer academic value on the subjects of
housing market and literature review as well as pedagogical value on teaching
of these two subjects.
Literature review on housing market with scholarly essay writing
A
housing market comprises “the supply and demand for houses, usually in a
particular country or region” (Pettinger, 2015). Features of a housing market
include: (i) housing supply, (ii) housing demand, (iii) house prices, (iv)
rented sector and (v) government intervention in the housing market (Pettinger,
2015). For a start, primary research topics on housing market can be gauged
from the coverage of the International
Journal of Housing Markets and Analysis (Emerald). Topics, with regard to
this journal coverage, include:
·
Examination of individual house price,
design and cost factors;
·
Examination of housing trends and
influencing factors, e.g., demographics, unemployment rates, financial and
economic factors, urban planning and advancement of technology;
·
Government policy and influences on
housing;
·
Social housing considerations;
·
Examination of housing markets in
developed and developing countries;
·
Examination of buyers and sellers in a
housing market.
Beyond
that, the subject of housing market is of interest to several disciplines,
i.e., housing studies, economics, property management and urban studies. This
is manifested by where academic articles on house market have been published,
e.g., Housing Studies (Taylor and
Francis), Housing, Theory and Society
(Taylor and Francis), International Journal
of Housing Markets and Analysis (Emerald), Urban Studies (Sage), Urban
Policy and Research (Taylor and Francis), International Journal of Strategic Property Management (Taylor and
Francis), Journal of Property Research
(Taylor and Francis), Journal of Post
Keynesian Economics (Taylor and Francis), Journal of Housing Economics (Academic Press), Real Estate Economics (American Real Estate and Urban Economics
Association) and The Economic Journal
(Wiley) and Regional Science and Urban
Economics (North-Holland). These diverse journals take up different
perspectives to study housing market. Via the literature review on these
academic journals by the writer, the main ideas from the housing market
literature are synthesized into seven associated themes.
Theme
1: housing demand
Idea
1.1: Investors are interested in residential property as it provides “a
different risk-return profile from commercial real estate” (Pomogajko and
Vigtländer, 2012).
Idea
1.2: There was a concern expressed by some economists about irrational
exuberance taking place in some housing markets (Hargreaves, 2008).
Idea
1.3: Low interest rates stimulate tremendous surge in housing demand (Taylor,
2007).
Idea
1.4: “Gradually homeownership became deeply embedded in the UK psyche as the
tenure of aspiration” (Pryce and Sprigings, 2009).
Idea
1.5: “In the UK… first time buyers increasingly rely on parents to fund the
higher value deposits necessary to enter the homeownership market” (Pryce and
Sprigings, 2009).
Idea
1.6: “Low-income households …..find it harder to enter the cycle at the most
profitable point – i.e. to buy when prices are low – because of the correlation
between credit availability and house price movements” (Pryce and Sprigings,
2009).
Idea
1.7: “Conventional wisdom holds that it is better to own a home than any other
option because the home then becomes an investment that affords people a great
deal of flexibility in their future financial options…” (Fowler III and
Lipscomb, 2010).
Idea
1.8: “.. Housing is a particularly powerful symbol of status and prestige
… which, according to the conspicuous
consumption hypothesis, leads to a desire for a relatively larger house”
(Leguizamon, 2010).
Theme 2:
housing supply
Idea
2.1: In Guangzhou, China, residential areas are divided into two categories:
those built before and after the 1990s. This reflects the “gradual transition
from the central supply and allocation to marketization”; the intention of the
government was to alleviate “the housing shortage
problem, diversifying housing provision, nurturing the private real-estate
market, and improving the quality of dwellings” (Jim and Chen, 2007).
Idea
2.2: “Quantifying unsold stock in Italy is a
subject that is attracting the attention of various players in the construction
and real estate sector, such as public bodies involved in planning projects,
promoters and developers….” (Ciaramella and Celani, 2014).
Theme
3: housing prices
and returns on investment
Idea
3.1: Housing prices can be conceived as being determined by macroeconomic
variables (the homogeneous housing market theory camp) or by the interplay
between housing market segments (the heterogeneous housing market theory camp) (Borgesen,
2014).
Idea
3.2: Inflation, population, unemployment and GDP are important determinants of
returns on housing (Fereidouni and Bazrafshan, 2012).
Idea
3.3: Synchronization of business cycles, especially between nearby countries,
affects co-movement of housing prices among countries (Pomogajko and
Vigtländer, 2012).
Idea
3.4: “…rents drive house prices and not vice versa” (Hargreaves, 2008).
Idea
3.5: The hedonic pricing method can be and has been employed to assess monetary
values of housing attributed to environmental externalities (Jim and Chen,
2007).
Idea
3.6: “In a competitive market, the systematic variation in the price of a heterogeneous
property is comprised of a bundle of characteristics. The realized sale price
could be attributed to the willingness-to-pay for the characteristics” (Jim
and Chen, 2007).
Idea
3.7: “In equilibrium the price paid by consumers for the flow of services from
the housing stock, the real rental price of housing services, should equal the
real user cost, which is the opportunity cost of investing in those services”
(Pain and Westaway, 1996).
Idea
3.8: “There are two main measures to determine
whether property prices are in bubble territory: the P/E (price/earnings) ratio and the price-to-income ratio” (Mercille, 2014).
Idea 3.9: “.. Although the income of average household in
Beijing is increasing, it appears that house prices have been rising at a
faster rate, causing an affordability
problem….” (Liu, Reed and Wu, 2008).
Idea 3.10: “..the fundamental reason
driving both the rise in the real price of housing and its increased volatility
is the increasing constraint on the supply or urban space applied by the
British system of land use planning and its attempts to contain urban areas”
(Chesire, 2004).
Theme
4: housing market
size and dynamics
Idea
4.1: “An examination of historical house sales data reveals that housing
markets are cyclical” (Hargreaves, 2008).
Idea
4.2: “…. the focus on the economic analysis of the housing market has been at
the individual urban housing market or regional level” (Jones, 2002). Now, the
concept of “a housing market area” has also been worked on by academics (Jones,
2002).
Idea
4.3: “The term “bubble” …. refers to a situation in which excessive public
expectations of future price increases cause prices to be temporarily elevated…
The term “housing bubble” had virtually no currency until 2002…” (Case and
Shiller, 2003).
Idea
4.4: “…instability in property markets is
closely related to financial crises, such as the property bubble collapses in
Japan and Scandinavia in the early 1990s, the USA financial crisis triggered by
the Lehman Shock in 2008, and so forth.” (Shimizu and Karato, 2014).
Idea 4.5: “The importance
of transaction costs and conversion costs in the market for residential housing
suggests that the observed housing consumption of an individual household will
generally differ from its “equilibrium” level of demand …” (Hanushek and
Quigley, 1979).
Idea
4.6: Housing prices diffuse, e.g., a shock in price movement in one region, to
neighbouring regions over time (Brady, 2011).
Idea
4.7: North Sea oil development influences “the owner occupied housing market of
Aberdeen sub-region in the 1970s and the consequent response by private
housebuilders” (Jones and Maclennan, 1986).
Theme
5: major
stakeholders and their activities
Idea
5.1: Successive UK governments have been promoting property as an investment
(Pryce and Sprigings, 2009).
Idea
5.2: “news organisations largely sustained the [housing]
bubble until the property market collapsed” (Mercille, 2014).
Idea
5.3: “…since 1922,… successive [Irish] government, rather
than addressing adequately social housing conditions, …subsidised
private-sector developers and mortgage lenders, therefore gradually pushing
larger sections of the population into owner-occupation….” (Mercille, 2014).
Idea 5.4: “the increased number of real estate agents [In Iran]
and their activities positively significantly stimulate housing prices and
rents…” (Fereidouni, 2012).
Idea 5.5: “..In a centrally planned economy, as China was until
recently, housing was not a commodity,…but merely as a social obligation to be
met by administrative organizations, state enterprises or municipal government”
(Fu, 2000).
Idea 5.6: “…privatization [of Hungary’s publicly owned rental
housing] would bring savings in rent subsidies to the overstretched central budget”
(Dániel, 1997).
Idea 5.7: “Most governments recognized at least three major
purposes for intervention in the private housing market: allocation,
stabilization, and growth and redistribution” (Ha, 2013).
Theme
6: market
segmentation
Idea
6.1: “Within urban and real estate analyses, it has
become clear that submarkets differentiated by housing or neighborhood type
serve important purposes in urban analyses, and even more important purposes in
home and property assessment” (Goodman and Thibodeau, 2003).
Idea 6.2: “Analysts have taken different
approaches to identifying submarket boundaries within metropolitan areas”
(Goodman and Thibodeau, 2003).
Idea
6.3: “Affordable housing is usually targeted
at those whose housing needs cannot be met by the open market due to inadequate
purchasing power” (Ayoade and Ahmed, 2014).
Idea 6.4: “in equilibrium the housing market will
be racially segmented under a wide variety of conditions…” (Courant, 1978).
Idea
6.5: “there are two basic housing markets. The first one is the market for
housing services, and the other is the market of the stock of housing
structures, and that is the investment market” (Ha, 2013).
Theme
7: impacts and
contributions to the society
Idea
7.1: “….some home owners …increase spending on consumer items by borrowing
against increased home equity…” (Hargreaves, 2008).
Idea
7.2: If increases in house prices cannot be justified by increased labour
market productivity, then house price increases “represent an intergenerational
transfer payment between existing and aspiring home owners” (Hargreaves, 2008).
Idea
7.3: The general business cycle and real estate cycle were strongly correlated
though not necessarily synchronised (Hargreaves, 2008).
Idea
7.4: “… the housing market lies at the heart of the European unemployment
problem… By making it expensive to change location, high levels of
home-ownership foster spatial mismatch between workers' skills and the
available jobs…” (Oswald, 1999).
Idea
7.5: “Housing impacts on the real economy via the construction, financial,
estate agency and legal sectors and through housing-equity financed
consumption, all of which are sensitive to housing market fluctuations, and all
have become increasingly inter-linked across nations as a result of the globalisation
of capital and labour…” (Pryce and Sprigings, 2009).
Idea
7.6: “… the long-term prospects for housing wealth remain strong for those that
can access and maintain mortgage finance” (Pryce and Sprigings, 2009).
Idea
7.7: “Rising property prices directly benefitted
builders and developers, banks, the government and property firms and,
indirectly, the broader economy, thanks to high levels of growth” (Mercille,
2014).
Idea 7.8: “…The promotion of home-ownership in East Asian
countries has had a positive impact, but has generated inequality and
speculation” (Ha, 2013).
The numerous housing market ideas illustrated above
underline the huge and diverse theories and viewpoints examined in the housing
market literature. Other than grouping them into the aforementioned seven themes,
it is also useful to review all these ideas from different perspectives, e.g., the
six perspectives adopted in the space-place-home matrix (Ho, 2016b; 2016c): (i)
objective and history-sensitive, (ii) objective and history-insensitive, (iii) subjective
and history-sensitive, (iv) subjective and history-insensitive, (v) critical
and history-sensitive, and (vi) critical and history-insensitive perspectives.
Adopting a multi-perspective stance to conduct literature review fosters a
comprehensive, critical and creative way to conduct intellectual learning and
problem-solving (Ho, 2013; 2014a; 2014b). Such an exercise is outside the scope
of this study, though. All in all, a general intellectual landscape of the
housing market field of study is provided via such literature review in essay
form. So far, the literature review exercise is chiefly exploratory in nature
and not focused enough to inform a research project with specific research
objectives and questions. It remains useful for a preliminary literature review
to stimulate thinking on figuring out a research theme by a researcher on
housing market study, depending on a researcher’s specific research interest and
concerns. The intellectual landscape on housing market is further visualized
via diagramming techniques. Such an exercise is presented in the next section.
Literature review on housing market
with diagramming techniques
Using
diagramming techniques for literature review is not a new idea. It has been
discussed in research methods textbooks, such as Saunders et al. (2012). Using the mind mapping, cognitive mapping and system
mapping to conduct literature review on employability have been reported in Ho
(2016a). Here, the same three diagramming tools are again employed to render
more vividly the intellectual landscape on housing market, based on the essay
form of literature review presented in the previous section. The first diagram
is a mind map (Buzan and Buzan, 1995), followed by a system map (Open University,
2016); finally, a cognitive map (Eden et al.,
1983) is provided. Figure 1 is thus the mind map, shown as follows:
Regarding
Figure 1, the mind map puts the core idea of housing market as the central node on the map. The seven branches out
of the central node “Housing Market” represent the seven themes as identified
in the previous section. Sub-branches out of the seven main branches stand for
the main ideas associated with the main branches. Overall, the tree-form mind
map (re: Figure 1) renders a visual and coloured picture on the knowledge
structure on housing market, which is easier to comprehend at a glance than an
essay form of literature review. Nevertheless, it does not indicate how the various
main ideas of housing market are related with a tree-form knowledge structure.
The
next figure, Figure 2, is the system map on the housing market literature. The
figure identifies the main topics to cover, i.e., the structure of the system
of interest, in presenting the housing literature to readers. The map chiefly
uses blobs, words and boundaries to convey the system of interest, in our case,
the housing market literature. This writer also recommends usage of arrows as
an additional symbol to indicate the inter-relatedness of the various
sub-systems in the map as an additional map symbol (Ho, 2016a). In Figure 2,
the main sub-systems of the system map correspond to the seven themes in the
housing market literature. Here, the system map is simpler than the mind map,
but more clearly convey the key themes of housing market to audience in a
presentation exercise. [Clustering the system map with more details in the blobs
is considered by the writer to be overwhelming to its readers.]
The
last figure, Figure 3, is a cognitive map that portrays how certain housing
market variables interact with each other to make up a systemic and dynamic housing
market situation.
The
twelve variables are selected from the housing market literature. Their
influences with each other are indicated by the arrows that connect them. A +ve
sign on the arrow indicates a positive correlation between the connected
variables while a –ve sign signifies a negative correlation between the
variables. Some of the variables are connected to form feedback loops. In this
regard, a positive loop (e.g., +, +, +; or -, -, +) is self-amplifying whereas
a negative loop (e.g., +, +, -) is self-stabilizing. Compared with Figures 1
and 2, Figure 3 is capable to depict a systemic situation with a housing market
theme whereas Figures 1 and 2 cannot.
On the whole, the diagramming techniques enable us to utilize more of our right brain to conduct literature review. The exercise, as presented in this paper, confirms the view of Ho (2016a) that diagramming techniques do not replace, but complement literature review with scholarly essay-form of literature review (which is mainly a kind of left-brain activity). Moreover, it also largely confirms the observations by Ho (2016a) about these three diagramming techniques with regard to (i) resolution level, (ii) perspective expressiveness, (iii) knowledge structure forms, and (iv) stimulation and engagement of thinking. The value of the diagramming-based literature review for managerial intellectual learning (Ho, 2013; 2014a; 2014b) is examined in the next section.
On the whole, the diagramming techniques enable us to utilize more of our right brain to conduct literature review. The exercise, as presented in this paper, confirms the view of Ho (2016a) that diagramming techniques do not replace, but complement literature review with scholarly essay-form of literature review (which is mainly a kind of left-brain activity). Moreover, it also largely confirms the observations by Ho (2016a) about these three diagramming techniques with regard to (i) resolution level, (ii) perspective expressiveness, (iii) knowledge structure forms, and (iv) stimulation and engagement of thinking. The value of the diagramming-based literature review for managerial intellectual learning (Ho, 2013; 2014a; 2014b) is examined in the next section.
The value of diagramming-based
literature review for managerial intellectual learning
The
kind of literature review carried out in this paper as well as in Ho (2016a) is
chiefly exploratory in nature. It is what a researcher would do to make an
overall grasp of a particular research topic without clearly formulated
research objectives and questions. In short, it amounts to a preliminary
literature review exercise at the very initial stage of a research project.
From the perspective of intellectual learning, this exercise is intellectually
highly stimulating itself. Using scholarly essay writing together with
diagramming techniques have been demonstrated here and in Ho (2016a) to be very
useful to go through this preliminary literature review exercise. In terms of
the managerial intellectual learning thinking of Ho (2013; 2014a; 2014b), such
a literature review involves managerial intellectual learning, but still not Multi-perspective,
Systems-based (MPSB) managerial intellectual learning. Specifically, it is directly
associated with Phase 1 (Data Management) and Phase 2 (Absorbed reading) of the
managerial intellectual learning framework of Ho (2013; 214a; 2014b), not yet involving
Phase 3 (The Multi-perspective, Systems-based (MPSB) knowledge compilation) and
Phase* (Practice-based intellectual learning). As such, the general
intellectual knowledge gained via this preliminary literature review inevitably
has very low actionable value. Nonetheless, it is a required learning exercise
to enable MPSB managerial intellectual learning to be carried out subsequently.
For this reason, the observations and illustrative examples on
diagramming-based literature review made here and in Ho (2016a) have academic
value in terms of contribution to the theoretical development of managerial
intellectual learning as launched by Ho in 2013. Viewed from this academic
context, this paper and the previous one (Ho, 2016a) can be regarded as supporting
an academic endeavour which is innovative, even though the topic of using
diagrams in literature review per se is not novel in the research methods field.
Concluding remarks
Using
diagramming techniques in literature review, whether done alone or in groups, can
be an engaging and creative exercise. This is what this paper and Ho (2016a) intend
to convey to readers. At the same time, different diagramming techniques have different
strengths and weaknesses in terms of idea stimulation and presentation quality.
Thus, it is useful for researchers to assess the practical value of these techniques
for literature review. Finally, diagramming techniques for preliminary literature
review, as done in this paper, are also useful in managerial intellectual learning.
Exactly how relevant they are in managerial intellectual learning has been discussed
in this paper in terms of the managerial intellectual learning framework of Ho (2013;
2014a; 2014b). In this respect, the discussion is chiefly exploratory; more research
works need to be carried on this topic still.
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