We revisit the relationship between financing constraints and homeownership rates using the 2004 wave of the 1979 National Longitudinal Survey of Youth. The survey respondents are a nationally representative sample of Americans 39-47 years of age as of this wave. As most of the sample had been in their current residence prior to 2004, this study reflects housing tenure status decisions made prior to the recent credit expansion and subsequent crisis. Past research has emphasized wealth constraints, and income constraints as limiting homeownership. The estimation results here point to primary roles for credit impairment and lack of credit history. We also find that excluding controls for the endogeneity of wealth and income may mask the impac...
In this paper we use a large panel of individuals from Consumer Credit Panel dataset, and study the ...
In between 1983 to 2004, (i) U.S. average consumer debt, mostly collateral backed, has increased fro...
Most US house price models break down in the mid-2000s, due to the omission of exogenous changes in ...
The impact of borrowing constraints on homeownership has been well established in the literature. We...
Housing analysts have generally assumed that mortgage qualification requirements significantly const...
This paper identifies the impact of borrowing constraints on homeownership in the U.S. in the afterm...
This study has two main objectives. First, we estimate various alternative specifications of the ten...
There is growing concern that the rising tuition and educational debt burdens of college students, a...
This paper utilizes micro data to directly quantify the impact of mortgage underwriting criteria on ...
Credit rationing through borrowing constraints has long been an important research topic in the lite...
Recent studies contend that answers to questions in the Survey of Consumer Finances reveal whether o...
This paper analyses how individual characteristics and credit market conditions interact and determi...
This paper deals with the importance of liquidity constraints in shaping one of the main consumption...
We investigate the issue of pervasive credit constraints among US households. There is considerable ...
"I test the credit-market effects of housing wealth shocks by estimating the consumption elasticity ...
In this paper we use a large panel of individuals from Consumer Credit Panel dataset, and study the ...
In between 1983 to 2004, (i) U.S. average consumer debt, mostly collateral backed, has increased fro...
Most US house price models break down in the mid-2000s, due to the omission of exogenous changes in ...
The impact of borrowing constraints on homeownership has been well established in the literature. We...
Housing analysts have generally assumed that mortgage qualification requirements significantly const...
This paper identifies the impact of borrowing constraints on homeownership in the U.S. in the afterm...
This study has two main objectives. First, we estimate various alternative specifications of the ten...
There is growing concern that the rising tuition and educational debt burdens of college students, a...
This paper utilizes micro data to directly quantify the impact of mortgage underwriting criteria on ...
Credit rationing through borrowing constraints has long been an important research topic in the lite...
Recent studies contend that answers to questions in the Survey of Consumer Finances reveal whether o...
This paper analyses how individual characteristics and credit market conditions interact and determi...
This paper deals with the importance of liquidity constraints in shaping one of the main consumption...
We investigate the issue of pervasive credit constraints among US households. There is considerable ...
"I test the credit-market effects of housing wealth shocks by estimating the consumption elasticity ...
In this paper we use a large panel of individuals from Consumer Credit Panel dataset, and study the ...
In between 1983 to 2004, (i) U.S. average consumer debt, mostly collateral backed, has increased fro...
Most US house price models break down in the mid-2000s, due to the omission of exogenous changes in ...