This paper measures the welfare effects of removing the mortgage interest deduction under a variety of implementation scenarios. To this end, we build a life-cycle model with heterogeneous households calibrated to the U.S. economy, which features long-term mortgages and costly refinancing. In line with previous research, we find that most households would prefer to be born into an economy without the deductibility. However, when we incorporate transitional dynamics, less than forty percent of households are in favor of a reform and the average welfare effect is negative. This result holds under a number of removal designs
The goal of this project is to summarize what sort of benefits and costs the mortgage interest deduc...
AbstractIn most equilibrium sorting models (ESMs) of residential choice across neighborhoods, the qu...
This paper examines one of the most controversial items of the new GOP tax bill, the Mortgage Intere...
Costly reversals of bad policies: the case of the mortgage interest deduction This paper measures th...
Costly reversals of bad policies: the case of the mortgage interest deduction This paper measures th...
Costly reversals of bad policies: the case of the mortgage interest deduction This paper measures th...
Aggressive deregulation of the mortgage market in the early 1980s triggered innova-tions that greatl...
We use the U.S. Survey of Consumer Finances to measure the change in federal tax liability that woul...
In this paper, we build a dynamic stochastic general-equilibrium model with housing and household de...
This article explores the potential effects of eliminating the home mortgage interest deduction. Est...
The authors examine the potential dynamic fiscal effects of revising or completely eliminating the h...
Many Americans consider the mortgage interest deduction a necessary fixture of the American tax syst...
The home mortgage interest deduction, also referred to as the MID, has remained relatively unchanged...
This paper examines the impact of the combined U.S. state and federal mortgage interest deduction (M...
We use the US Survey of Consumer Finances to measure the change in federal tax liability that would ...
The goal of this project is to summarize what sort of benefits and costs the mortgage interest deduc...
AbstractIn most equilibrium sorting models (ESMs) of residential choice across neighborhoods, the qu...
This paper examines one of the most controversial items of the new GOP tax bill, the Mortgage Intere...
Costly reversals of bad policies: the case of the mortgage interest deduction This paper measures th...
Costly reversals of bad policies: the case of the mortgage interest deduction This paper measures th...
Costly reversals of bad policies: the case of the mortgage interest deduction This paper measures th...
Aggressive deregulation of the mortgage market in the early 1980s triggered innova-tions that greatl...
We use the U.S. Survey of Consumer Finances to measure the change in federal tax liability that woul...
In this paper, we build a dynamic stochastic general-equilibrium model with housing and household de...
This article explores the potential effects of eliminating the home mortgage interest deduction. Est...
The authors examine the potential dynamic fiscal effects of revising or completely eliminating the h...
Many Americans consider the mortgage interest deduction a necessary fixture of the American tax syst...
The home mortgage interest deduction, also referred to as the MID, has remained relatively unchanged...
This paper examines the impact of the combined U.S. state and federal mortgage interest deduction (M...
We use the US Survey of Consumer Finances to measure the change in federal tax liability that would ...
The goal of this project is to summarize what sort of benefits and costs the mortgage interest deduc...
AbstractIn most equilibrium sorting models (ESMs) of residential choice across neighborhoods, the qu...
This paper examines one of the most controversial items of the new GOP tax bill, the Mortgage Intere...