Impact of ethnic and cultural diversity on millennial living preferences and homeownership

IF 1.5 Q3 URBAN STUDIES
Yi Wu, Alan Tidwell, Vivek Sah
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Abstract

Purpose This study aims to examine living preference and tenure among millennials, with a particular focus on the impact of ethnic and cultural diversity on housing outcomes including observed homeownership inequalities. Design/methodology/approach Using the individual panel data from three waves in American Housing Survey, 2015–2019, this study compares the likelihood of co-residing among Asian and Hispanic millennials with non-Hispanic white millennial peers. Furthermore, this study estimates the effect of co-residence on homeownership across generational and ethnic backgrounds. Findings This study finds a preference for coresident adult familial households among foreign-born Asian and Hispanic millennials, and US-born Hispanic millennials when compared to their non-Hispanic white millennial peers. The results are robust after considering neighborhood selection bias, affordability and education. The effect of co-residence on ownership is significant and positive, suggesting this living arrangement contributes to homeownership across all generational and ethnic groups. Practical implications Housebuilders should be aware of Asian and Hispanic millennials’ increased appetite for extended family living arrangements and consider increasing the physical size of affordable or workforce-oriented rental housing and new single family construction to accommodate more adult co-living arrangements. Originality/value This study provides a more comprehensive understanding of the role ethnic and cultural diversity has on millennial adult living preferences and its generational differences, which is not just “boomeranging” as identified by previous literature, contributing to the growing interest in the housing research on the effect of ethnic diversity and culture on millennials’ homeownership rates.
种族和文化多样性对千禧一代生活偏好和住房所有权的影响
本研究旨在研究千禧一代的居住偏好和租住权,特别关注种族和文化多样性对住房结果的影响,包括观察到的住房所有权不平等。本研究使用2015-2019年美国住房调查三波的单独面板数据,比较了亚洲和西班牙裔千禧一代与非西班牙裔白人千禧一代共同居住的可能性。此外,本研究估计了跨代和种族背景的共同居住对房屋所有权的影响。这项研究发现,与非西班牙裔的千禧一代白人相比,在外国出生的亚裔和西班牙裔千禧一代以及在美国出生的西班牙裔千禧一代更倾向于共同的成年家庭。在考虑了社区选择偏差、可负担性和教育程度之后,结果是稳健的。共同居住对所有权的影响是显著的和积极的,这表明这种生活安排有助于所有代际和种族群体的住房所有权。房屋建筑商应该意识到亚洲和西班牙裔千禧一代对大家庭生活安排的胃口越来越大,并考虑增加经济适用房或以劳动力为导向的租赁住房的实际规模,以及新的单户住宅建筑,以容纳更多的成年人共同生活安排。独创性/价值本研究更全面地了解了种族和文化多样性对千禧一代成人居住偏好及其代际差异的作用,而不仅仅是以往文献所认定的“回巢效应”,这有助于对种族多样性和文化对千禧一代住房拥有率影响的住房研究产生越来越大的兴趣。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.80
自引率
29.40%
发文量
68
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