LT6 Housing
LT6 Housing
LT6 Housing
Lecture 6: Housing
ROADMAP
1. Introduction
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1. INTRODUCTION
IMPORTANCE OF HOUSING
– For many Americans on the verge of retirement, housing wealth emerges as a crucial component of
net worth. This is true across educational levels and across all ethnic groups (Lusardi and Mitchell,
2007).
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1. INTRODUCTION
IMPORTANCE OF HOUSING
• Thus, an extensive literature surrounding housing in the form of
– Mortgages
• Demand, refinancing, default
– Jobs
– Government revenue
• In the form of Land sales and stamp duties
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1. INTRODUCTION
BUY OR RENT?
• The decision to buy or rent depends on various factors such as how housing prices
fluctuate.
– Correlation of housing market prices
If the homeowner sells his home and moves to a correlated housing market, the repurchase price is
partially hedged by the sale price, thereby reducing total asset price risk
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1. INTRODUCTION
BUY OR RENT?
• There are various implications of the buy and rent decision on households
– Homeowners amass more wealth than renters – forced to save
• Somerville, Teller, Farrell, Kasahara and Qiang (2007) find that renters have to be extremely
disciplined in investing the cost differences from homes into high yield high risk vehicles to be
ahead of home owners.
– Home ownership encourages people to care about neighbours and towns
• Thus, policymakers encourage homeownership by introducing:
– Tax Subsidy
• Gruber, Jensen and Kleven (2017) find that the tax subsidy changes home owners’ behavior on
the intensive margin by inducing them to buy larger and more expensive houses.
– Mortgage interest deductions
• Unfortunately, Glaeser and Shapiro (2003) as well as Gruber, Jensen and Kleven (2017) find that
mortgage interest deduction has no effect on homeownership in the US and Denmark
respectively.
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1. INTRODUCTION
BUY OR RENT?
• The changing status from a renter to an
owner and upgrading of houses over time
is known as the housing ladder
• This is due to
– Changing Demographics
• Banks, Blundell, Oldfield and Smith (2015)
document that the housing ladder is due to
changing demographics over the life cycle as
individuals through marriage, child bearing
and old age
– House price volatility
• Households demand for housing early in life
to insure against fluctuation in house prices
• Increases in the minimum level of housing
demand result in an increase in the relative
utility of owning
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2. HOUSING FOR INVESTMENT
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2. HOUSING FOR INVESTMENT
MOTIVES FOR HOUSEHOLD DEMAND FOR ASSETS
• Given that the home purchase decision is also a portfolio allocation decision.
• The decision to buy a home depends on reasons closely related to the investment
decision where:
– Labour uncertainty causes household to accumulate wealth in the form of a
home
• Amongst Italian households, Guiso, Jappelli and Terlizzese (1996) find subjective expectations of
labor income variance 12 months ahead reduces the share of illiquid and risky financial assets
• Among entrepreneurs, Heaton and Lucas (2000) find those with high and variable business
income hold less wealth in stocks.
• In Netherlands, Hochguertel (2002) argues that income uncertainty was less important compared
to financial asset holdings, age, education and tax incentives.
– Temperance where investments in home as a safe assets
– Demand for liquidity in the form
– Committed expenditure refers to the risk of committing to fixed nominal
payments over a long horizon
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2. HOUSING FOR INVESTMENT
• For example, does home ownership explain the small proportion of wealth
invested?
– No: Labour uncertainty
• Bertaut and Haliassos (1997), Gollier and Pratt (1997), Viceira (2001), and Heaton and Lucas
(1996) show that the unavoidable risk in labor uncertainty and hence prudence is too small to
explain the stockholding puzzle
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2. HOUSING FOR INVESTMENT
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2. HOUSING FOR INVESTMENT
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2. HOUSING FOR INVESTMENT
– Consumption
• Mian, Rao and Sufi (2013) find that variation in housing prices affect household net worth
which led to the cut in consumption for low net worth households and highly levered
household
– Labor Productivity
• Gu, He and Qian (2018) document that house price increases raise shirking behavior and lower
labor productivity.
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2. HOUSING FOR INVESTMENT
BOOM AND BUST IN HOUSE PRICES
• Given the impact of the 2008 subprime mortgage crisis, an overwhelming body of
studies explore why housing prices change
– Credit constraints
• Piazzesi and Schneider (2016) argue that consumers’ credit conditions and expectations are
crucial in explaining house price fluctuations.
• Cox and Ludvigson (2018) show that changes in credit supply is positively related with riskier
non-conforming debt in mortgage lending. In addition, credit supply is also found to be a strong
predictor of house price growth
– Expectations about home prices
• However, Kaplan, Mitman and Violante (2017) show that booms and busts leading up to the
2008 mortgage crisis is from shifting expectations about future house price growth which in
turn are responsible for half of the booms and busts in non-durable expenditures.
– Speculation
• Gao, Sockin and Xiong (2019) find that speculation amplifies house price appreciation during
2004 to 2009, where speculation drives increased employment, per capita income and business
establishments. However, it also magnifies the drop in house price during the housing bust,
with corresponding decline in employment, income and business establishments.
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3. SOCIOECONOMIC FUNCTION OF GOVERNMENT-BACKED
HOUSING PROGRAM
• Case 1: Chicago
• Case 2: Singapore
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Case 1. Chicago: moved to opportunity?
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Public housing demolition in Chicago
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Move to lower poverty neighborhoods
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53 high-rise buildings located in 7 projects: 20
demolished (treated) buildings and 33 comparison
(control) group buildings not demolished
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Main findings
Nearly 44% of
treated households
lived in
neighborhoods with
poverty rates less
than 40% (threshold
of extreme poverty
neighborhood)
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employment and earnings by age of measurement
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Research questions
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Public housing in Singapore
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Public housing in Singapore
C H I L D ’ S H O U S I N G R A N K V S . PA R E N T S ’ H O U S I N G R A N K 31
Heterogeneity
• Children born to parents at bottom 50 percentile ranks: 0.06 - high
(upward) mobility
• Children born to middle class (50-80 rank): 0.17 – downward mobility
• Children born to top 20-rank parents: 0.96 – high persistence in
housing consumption
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Mosaic plots:
conditional on parents’ residential type
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Mosaic plots:
conditional on housing locations
• Parents in non-central
regions: 50.2%, 30.1% and
19.7% of children end up in 0-
50, 50-80, 80-100 ranks,
respectively
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Impact of public housing on child’s upward mobility
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Impact of public housing on child’s upward mobility
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Impact of public housing on child’s upward mobility
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Impact of public housing on child’s upward mobility
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Impact of public housing on child’s upward mobility
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Summary and discussion
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