Housing Demand & Affordability for Low-Wage Households: Evidence from Minimum Wage Changes

Samuel Hughes
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

Rent-to-income ratios have risen over the past two decades with large increases at the bottom of the income distribution, prompting concern about a housing affordability crisis. This paper uses minimum wage changes as a natural experiment to study the relationship between housing demand & policies affecting low-wage households. If their housing demand is relatively inelastic, an increase in income will causally decrease rent-to-income ratios. The results suggest a 10% increase in minimum wages increases income for affected households by 1.9%, increases housing consumption by 0.5%, and decreases rent-to-income ratios by 1.4%. These estimates suggest that housing demand is fairly income inelastic, and preferences over housing demand are non-homothetic. In a modeling exercise, this paper suggests that homothetic models may not match housing demand behavior and may underestimate welfare gains to low-wage households.
低收入家庭的住房需求和负担能力:来自最低工资变化的证据
在过去20年里,租金与收入的比率一直在上升,收入分配底部的人群大幅增加,引发了人们对住房负担能力危机的担忧。本文以最低工资变动作为自然实验,研究住房需求与影响低收入家庭的政策之间的关系。如果他们的住房需求相对缺乏弹性,收入的增加会导致租金收入比的下降。结果表明,最低工资每提高10%,受影响家庭的收入就会增加1.9%,住房消费增加0.5%,租金收入比降低1.4%。这些估计表明,住房需求在收入上是非弹性的,对住房需求的偏好是非同质的。在建模过程中,本文表明,同质模型可能无法匹配住房需求行为,并且可能低估了低收入家庭的福利收益。
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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