close
MENU
3 mins to read

Why CVs distort the housing market

Auckland University's Deborah Levy say CVs are poor indicators of value.

Sally Lindsay
Wed, 23 Sep 2015

A misleading reliance on CVs as property price guides is having a major effect on the property market. 

Auckland University property professor Deborah Levy and researchers Dr Zhi Dong and James Young say CVs are poor indicators of value and using them for price-guide decisions distorts the

Want to read more? It's easy.

Choose your best value subscription option

Student

Exclusive offer for uni students studying at a New Zealand university (valued at $499).
Individual
Group membership
NBR Marketplace

Yearly Premium Online Subscription

NZ$499.00 / yearly

Monthly Premium Online Subscription

NZ$44.95 / monthly

Smartphone Only Subscription

NZ$24.95 / monthly

Premium Group Membership 10 Users

NZ$350+GST / monthly

$35 per user - Pay by monthly credit card debit

Premium Group Membership 20 Users

NZ$600+GST / monthly

$30 per user - Pay by monthly credit card debit

Premium Group Membership 50 Users

NZ$1250+GST / monthly

$25 per user - Pay by monthly credit card debit

Premium Group Membership 100 Users

NZ$1875+GST / monthly

$18.75 per user - Pay by monthly credit card debit

Yearly Premium Online Subscription + NBR Marketplace

NZ$499.00 / yearly

Already have an account? Login
Sally Lindsay
Wed, 23 Sep 2015
© All content copyright NBR. Do not reproduce in any form without permission, even if you have a paid subscription.
Why CVs distort the housing market
51715
true