1. Mortgage Lock-in, Lifecycle Migration, and the Welfare Effects of Housing Market Liquidity
- Author
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Gerardi, Kristopher, Qian, Franklin, and Zhang, David
- Subjects
Liquidity (Finance) ,Mortgages ,Welfare ,Real property ,Mortgages ,Banking, finance and accounting industries ,Business - Abstract
We use a search and matching model to study the heterogeneous welfare effects of housing market illiquidity due to mortgage lock-in over the lifecycle. We find that younger home buyers are disproportionately affected by mortgage lock-in, which disrupts their typical pattern of moving to higher-quality neighborhoods. We estimate a model with heterogeneous seller- buyers bargaining within markets defined by CBSA-income terciles and with endogenous migration across markets. We find that on average mortgage lock-in reduces household listing probabilities by 21 percent to 23 percent, increases time on the market by 52 percent to 142 percent, increases house prices by 3 percent to 8 percent, and decreases match surplus by 3 percent to 29 percent through its effects on the search and matching process. The pricing and match surplus effects are larger for younger households and for households in lower-income areas, due to a higher idiosyncratic dispersion in buyer valuation leading to larger match surplus variation in those areas. Our study highlights the welfare benefits of market thickness in real estate markets. JEL classification: G18, G21, E52 Key words: mortgage lock-in, moving to opportunity, housing market liquidity, idiosyncratic dispersion in house prices, FRMs, 1 Introduction The liquidity of housing markets plays a pivotal role in shaping both the buyer- seller match surplus and overall market outcomes under idiosyncratic buyer valuations. A thicker market, [...]
- Published
- 2024
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