THE HOUSING STOCK, HOUSING PRICES, AND USER COSTS: THE ROLES OF LOCATION, STRUCTURE, AND UNOBSERVED QUALITY

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Abstract

Which housing characteristics are important for understanding homeownership rates? How are housing characteristics priced in rental and owner-occupied markets? What can answers to these questions tell us about economic theories of homeownership? Using the English Housing Survey, we estimate a selection model of property allocations to the owner-occupied and rental sectors. Structural characteristics and unobserved quality are important for selection. Location is not. Accounting for selection is important for rent-to-price ratio estimates and explains some puzzling correlations between rent-to-price ratios and homeownership rates. These patterns are consistent with, among others, hypotheses of rental market contracting frictions related to housing maintenance.

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Halket, J., Nesheim, L., & Oswald, F. (2020). THE HOUSING STOCK, HOUSING PRICES, AND USER COSTS: THE ROLES OF LOCATION, STRUCTURE, AND UNOBSERVED QUALITY. International Economic Review, 61(4), 1777–1814. https://doi.org/10.1111/iere.12475

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