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Urban Inequality

Paper Session

Friday, Jan. 5, 2024 8:00 AM - 10:00 AM (CST)

Marriott Rivercenter, Conference Room 14
Hosted By: American Real Estate and Urban Economics Association
  • Chair: Lyndsey Anne Rolheiser, University of Connecticut

Unequal Access to Housing

Adam Nowak
,
West Virginia University
Patrick Smith
,
University of North Carolina-Charlotte

Abstract

A household's residential location has important implications for its short-term and long-term economic outcomes. This paper examines households' differential access to residential locations using a network analysis framework. We document four key stylized facts about housing markets and illustrate how they contribute to unequal access to housing in a two-stage search model. We show that the interaction of households' social and spatial networks determines their location choice set.

A Rising Tide Lifts All Homes? Poverty and the Evolution of Housing Quality

Erik Hembre
,
University of Illinois-Chicago
Michael Collins
,
University of Wisconsin-Madison
Samuel Wylde
,
University of Illinois-Chicago

Abstract

This study analyzes patterns of housing consumption and expenditures among social safety net recipients since 1985 using the American Housing Survey (AHS). Housing is a core component of consumption and is positively associated with well-being and health. Social safety net recipients, including those receiving Supplemental Security Income (SSI), Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) and cash welfare (AFDC/TANF), spend half of their income on housing and average monthly housing expenditures have risen from $692 to $1,341. Increased expenditures reflect, in part, improvements to housing quantity, including more square footage, more rooms, and larger lot sizes. Among these households show a marked reduction in poor-quality housing conditions, such as fewer sagging roofs, broken appliances, rodents, and peeling paint and quality improved across all 35 of our poor housing quality indicators. Combined, we find that these housing improvements equate to between a 35 and 44 percent increase in housing consumption and the average safety net recipient in 2021 enjoys housing consumption equivalent to the average national household in 1985. While relative levels of housing consumption have remained similar for safety net recipients, the ``rising tide'' of housing quality implies long-run benefits for families and children in terms of health and well-being.

Financial Literacy and Mortgage Stress

Mingzhi Hu
,
Zhejiang University of Technology
Zhenguo (Len) Lin
,
Florida International University
Yingchun Liu
,
University of North Texas

Abstract

This paper examines the effect of financial literacy on mortgage stress. Using data from the Panel Study of Income Dynamics (PSID), we find that borrowers with high levels of financial literacy are 60.3 percent less likely to suffer from mortgage stress than borrowers with low levels of financial literacy, after controlling for household characteristics, loan features, geographic effects, and working in the financial industry. Our estimated results are robust to potential sample selection bias and functional misspecification. In addition, we also find that the effect of financial literacy varies across borrowers of different ages. Further analysis reveals strong cross effects of financial literacy and quantitative reasoning on mortgage stress.

Estimation of Welfare Effects in Hedonic Difference-in-Differences: The Case in School Redistricting

Xiaozhou Ding
,
Dickinson College
Christopher Bollinger
,
University of Kentucky
Michael Clark
,
University of Kentucky
William Hoyt
,
University of Kentucky

Abstract

The difference-in-differences approach that identifies the capitalization of amenities through changes in housing prices has been widely used in the literature of hedonic estimation in the past decade. However, concerns have been raised about how to interpret the estimated capitalization effects as changes in welfare. Following an approach developed by Banzhaf (2021), we estimate the capitalization of school redistricting in a generalized difference-in-differences framework that incorporates general equilibrium effects. When comparing estimates from our generalized DID model to the conventional DID model, we find significant differences in both the capitalization effects and welfare changes associated with the school redistricting.

Discussant(s)
Philip Lewis Kalikman
,
Cambridge University
Stephen Ross
,
University of Connecticut
Kelsi Hobbs
,
University of Maine
Brian Asquith
,
W.E. Upjohn Institute for Employment Research
JEL Classifications
  • G2 - Financial Institutions and Services
  • R2 - Household Analysis