Housing wealth or economic climate: Why do house prices matter for well-being?

Diskussionspapiere extern

Anita Ratcliffe

Bristol: Centre for Market and Public Organisation, 2010,
(CMPO Working Paper No. 10/234)

Abstract

This study investigates whether and why house prices matter for well-being. House prices may influence well-being via a wealth/access-to-credit mechanism, as a rise in prices increases housing wealth and the collateral value of a house, and via a relative concerns mechanism, if renters compare themselves to homeowners and vice versa. Alternatively, any correlation between house prices and well-being may simply reflect broader economic conditions rather than a causal effect. Using local area house price data, this study distinguishes between these alternative explanations by comparing the correlation between local house prices and well-being for homeowners and renters. A small positive correlation between house prices and well-being exists for both homeowners and renters, indicating the absence of a wealth/credit mechanism or relative concerns mechanism. This correlation cannot be explained by economic variables such as local unemployment, earnings or earnings expectations, hinting at a purely psychological phenomenon.



Keywords: well being, housing, income and poverty, subjective indicators
Externer Link:
http://www.bristol.ac.uk/cmpo/publications/papers/2010/wp234.pdf

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