Type | Working Paper |
Title | Housing Demand and Expenditures: How Rising Rent Levels Affect Behavior and Cost-of-Living over Space and Time |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2014 |
URL | http://www.andraghent.com/HULM/Albouy.pdf |
Abstract | Since 1970, housing’s relative price, share of expenditure, and “unaffordability” have all grown. We estimate housing demand parameters using compensated and uncompensated frameworks over space and time, testing restrictions imposed by demand theory and household mobility. The data support the hypothesis that housing demand is both income and price inelastic, and that housing demand has exhibited a secular increase over time. We estimate an ideal cost-of-living index that demonstrates how the poor are impacted disproportionately in high-rent cities, and how rising rents amplified increases in real income inequality. Rising rents and inequality both help explain why housing has become less affordable |
» | United States - Census of Population and Housing 2000 - IPUMS Subset |