Homeownership has been in decline in a number of developed societies since the early 2000s driven, primarily, by declining entry among younger households who have been increasingly pushed into the rental sector. This trend has been associated with a growing intergenerational divide, or even conflict, and the emergence of ‘Generation Rent’. This paper explores the conditions surrounding diminishing access to owner-occupation among new households with a focus on the historic maturation of homeownership sectors, the restructuring of the political economy (financialization) around housing wealth and the inter-cohort dynamics surrounding the accumulation and transfer of housing wealth. The paper takes an international perspective drawing on evid...
Homeownership has become a ‘normalised’ tenure of choice in many advanced economies, with housing pl...
Since homeownership is a socioeconomic resource, along with income or occupational status, it is imp...
Despite the continuing preference for homeownership, it has become increasingly difficult for young ...
<p>Abstract copyright data collection owner.</p>This data collection comprises interview transcripts...
In this comprehensive volume, authors from across the social sciences explore how housing wealth tra...
The home and family have always been mutually embedded, with the former central to the realization a...
This paper unpacks the drivers of growing intergenerational housing wealth inequality in Australia. ...
In contrast to the post-war period, the late 20th and early 21st centuries in the UK have been chara...
There is much evidence of rising inequalities across advanced economies. This paper argues for the s...
In Japan, it has increasingly been becoming more difficult for young people to acquire a foothold on...
Homeownership has been declining in favour of private renting in most developed English speaking cou...
The literature on social and wealth inequality has long acknowledged the importance of intergenerati...
In contrast to the post-war period, the late 20th and early 21st centuries in the UK have been chara...
This paper studies intergenerational links in home ownership, an increasingly important wealth marke...
Home ownership in urbanized Taiwan exceeds 80 percent of all families, compared with about 60 percen...
Homeownership has become a ‘normalised’ tenure of choice in many advanced economies, with housing pl...
Since homeownership is a socioeconomic resource, along with income or occupational status, it is imp...
Despite the continuing preference for homeownership, it has become increasingly difficult for young ...
<p>Abstract copyright data collection owner.</p>This data collection comprises interview transcripts...
In this comprehensive volume, authors from across the social sciences explore how housing wealth tra...
The home and family have always been mutually embedded, with the former central to the realization a...
This paper unpacks the drivers of growing intergenerational housing wealth inequality in Australia. ...
In contrast to the post-war period, the late 20th and early 21st centuries in the UK have been chara...
There is much evidence of rising inequalities across advanced economies. This paper argues for the s...
In Japan, it has increasingly been becoming more difficult for young people to acquire a foothold on...
Homeownership has been declining in favour of private renting in most developed English speaking cou...
The literature on social and wealth inequality has long acknowledged the importance of intergenerati...
In contrast to the post-war period, the late 20th and early 21st centuries in the UK have been chara...
This paper studies intergenerational links in home ownership, an increasingly important wealth marke...
Home ownership in urbanized Taiwan exceeds 80 percent of all families, compared with about 60 percen...
Homeownership has become a ‘normalised’ tenure of choice in many advanced economies, with housing pl...
Since homeownership is a socioeconomic resource, along with income or occupational status, it is imp...
Despite the continuing preference for homeownership, it has become increasingly difficult for young ...