How do mortgage subsidies affect home ownership? Evidence from the mid-century GI Bills

Type Report
Title How do mortgage subsidies affect home ownership? Evidence from the mid-century GI Bills
Author(s)
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2011
URL http://econweb.umd.edu/~davis/eventpapers/fetterhow.pdf
Abstract
The largest 20th-century increase in U.S. home ownership occurred between 1940 and 1960,
associated largely with declining age at first ownership. I shed light on the contribution of
coincident government mortgage market interventions by examining home loan benefits granted
under the World War II and Korean War GI Bills. The impact of veterans’ housing benefits on
home ownership is positive for young men, and declines with age. Veterans’ benefits increased
aggregate home ownership rates primarily by shifting purchase earlier in life, explaining 7.4
percent of the overall 1940-60 increase and 25 percent of the increase for affected cohorts. A
rough extrapolation suggests that broader changes in mortgage terms may explain 40 percent
of the 1940-60 increase.

Related studies

»