What is it about?

This paper extends arguments set out by Lizieri in Towers of Capital (2009), exploring the relationship between commercial real estate investment, global capital flows and financial crises. The focus is on the inter-relationship between office markets in major world financial centres and global real estate investment strategies.

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Why is it important?

The paper sets out a framework for understanding market linkages, based both on the development of global capital markets and on micro-level research into the functioning of office markets. An examination of available global city attribute and inter-city flow data for the advanced producer services and real estate investment sectors provides insights into an inherent spatial contradiction associated with the dual role of real estate in globalization, as a physically fixed commodity, and as a fluid capital asset. A number of implications for city users, investors and policy-makers are identified.

Perspectives

The analysis demonstrates that global cities with the highest concentration of office investment are potentially most exposed to risk associated with international financial markets. Nevertheless, the interpretive limitations associated with quantitative analysis are highlighted in conclusion. The question is also posed, to what extent volatility matters... Cities matter and real estate has a value in use by knowledge-intensive global service providers in particular locations.

Professor Kathy Pain
University of Reading

Read the Original

This page is a summary of: International Office Investment in Global Cities: The Production of Financial Space and Systemic Risk, Regional Studies, January 2013, Taylor & Francis,
DOI: 10.1080/00343404.2012.753434.
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