Jeff Cohen, Ph.D.

Professor of Real Estate and Finance University of Connecticut

  • Storrs CT

Jeffrey Cohen is an expert on how airport noise, transit and highway infrastructure improvements impact real estate.

Contact

University of Connecticut

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Biography

Jeffrey P. Cohen is an associate professor of Real Estate and Finance at UConn’s Center for Real Estate, and Dean’s Ackerman Scholar, at the School of Business. Professor Cohen has longstanding collaborative research relationships with the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, and has been a recent Visiting Scholar at the St. Louis Fed in May, 2017 , December, 2017, March 2018, and June 2019. His current research interests include the impact of airports and airport noise on commercial and residential property values; property taxation; land value estimation; housing price spillovers across jurisdictions; the impacts of storms on real estate values; and the geographical aspects of REITs. Among approximately 40 peer-reviewed journal publications, he has published his research in several top journals, including: Review of Economics and Statistics, Journal of Urban Economics, Journal of Regional Science, Regional Science and Urban Economics, Journal of Real Estate Finance and Economics, Real Estate Economics, Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis Review, and others.

He has previous teaching experience at Tufts University, the University of Maryland at College Park, and the University of Hartford. Professor Cohen has also worked full-time at the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency as part of an award from the National Academies; and has been a Fellow with, and a seminar organizer for the Lincoln Institute of Land Policy. He also has previous full-time employment experience in the private sector as a Senior Economist at Standard and Poor’s. He has served on expert panels for the National Academies, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, and the Lincoln Institute of Land Policy. His other grants and consulting clients have included the U.S. Department of Energy, the U.S. Small Business Administration, Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), the Vancouver Airport Authority in Canada, the Lincoln Institute of Land Policy, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, and the National Metropolitan Transportation Center (METRANS) at California State University-Long Beach.

Professor Cohen is currently the Principal Investigator on Phase 1 of a grant from the State of Connecticut Department of Transportation and the U.S. Department of Transportation/Federal Highway Administration, on how the new commuter rail line (called CTrail) connecting New Haven, Hartford, and Springfield MA, impacts real estate in neighborhoods near the stations.

Areas of Expertise

Residential Real Estate
Applied Spatial Econometrics
Real Estate Economics and Finance
Transportation and Real Estate

Education

University of Maryland at College Park

Ph.D.

Economics

1998

University of Toronto

M.A.

Economics

1993

Tufts University

B.S.

Quantitative Economics

1992

Social

Media

Media Appearances

Homeownership trends: New data shows areas of concerns in CT

NBC Connecticut  tv

2023-12-01

For starters, overall home ownership in Connecticut went down in the decade between the 2010 and the 2020 census -anywhere from down roughly 1% in Windham County, to homeownership dropping almost 5% in Fairfield County.

We asked Jeffrey Cohen, UConn Business School professor of real estate, for his take.

“2020 was a period that was the beginning of the pandemic and there was lots of supply chain issues that disrupted new construction. And all of this can lead to a housing shortage that keeps prices high and makes it difficult for people to purchase houses," Cohen said.

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Looking for a house in CT? Here’s why so few are for sale and there’s no big building boom

Hartford Courant  print

2023-08-07

Last week, mortgage giant Freddie Mac reported that nationally the average rate for a 30-year, fixed-rate home loan was 6.9%, up from last week when it averaged 6.81%. A year ago, the 30-year fixed-rate mortgage averaged 4.99%.

“And that’s putting home buying out of reach for a lot of people,” Jeffrey P. Cohen, a professor of finance and real estate at the University of Connecticut in Storrs, said. “And a lot of people are turning to apartments for longer than they had hoped for or longer than they expected.”

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Why a criminology prof wants addiction clinics within 500m of major transit hubs

CBC Radio  radio

2023-04-01

Jeffrey Cohen, a professor at the University of Connecticut's School of Business, has been researching the benefits of bringing addiction and mental health treatment facilities near public transit routes. His research project ran between 2013 and 2018 is currently a working paper under peer review.

His team looked at a rapid bus transit line connecting four towns in Connecticut, including the state capital of Hartford.

"What we're finding is that there's this significant relationship between being close to these new transit start ups … and costs, operating costs are significantly less," said Cohen.

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Articles

Traffic Noise in Georgia: Sound Levels and Inequality

Journal of Housing Economics

2019

Using Lorenz-type curves, means tests, ordinary least squares, and locally weighted regressions (LWR), we examine the relative burdens of whites, blacks, and Hispanics in Georgia from road and air traffic noise. We find that whites bear less noise than either blacks or Hispanics and that blacks tend to experience more traffic noise than Hispanics. While every Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA) showed that blacks experienced relatively more noise than average, such a result did not hold for Hispanics in roughly half of the MSAs.

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Time-Geographically Weighted Regressions and Residential Property Value Assessment

FRB St. Louis Working Paper No. 2019-5

2019

In this study, we develop and apply a new methodology for obtaining accurate and equitable property value assessments. This methodology adds a time dimension to the Geographically Weighted Regressions (GWR) framework, which we call Time-Geographically Weighted Regressions (TGWR). That is, when generating assessed values, we consider sales that are close in time and space to the designated unit.

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Spatial effects and house price dynamics in the USA

Journal of Housing Economics

2016

While an understanding of spatial spillovers and feedbacks in housing markets could provide valuable information for location decisions, little known research has examined this issue for the US Metropolitan Statistical Areas (MSAs). Also, it is unknown whether there can be differences in the spatial effects before and after a major housing “bust”. In this paper we examine spatial effects in house price dynamics.

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