01333nam a22001577a 4500999001900000008004100019100005300060245005800113260004900171300003200220520074200252773004900994906001801043942000701061952010701068 c521200d521200221226b ||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d aHausman, N., Nyska, T.R. and Zussman, N. 936411 aHomeownership, labor supply, and neighborhood quality aAmerican Economic Journal: Economic Policy  a14(2), May, 2022: p.193-230 aThis paper provides evidence on the external benefits of homeownership among low-income populations. A natural experiment in Israel generated large changes in neighborhood homeownership rates while holding fixed the residents and housing stock, two primary sources of bias in traditional estimates. When public housing tenants are given the opportunity to buy their units, buyers increase labor supply. Effects are felt in the neighborhood: when homeownership rises by 10 pp, neighborhood home prices rise 1.5–2 percent. Instrumenting for purchases using government discounts generates similar results. Results are relevant for policies using financial incentives to increase homeownership among low-income populations. – Reproduced  aAmerican Economic Journal: Economic Policy  aLABOUR SUPPLY cAR 00102ddc40709395252aIIPAbIIPAd2022-12-26h14(2), May, 2022: p.193-230pAR127748r2022-12-26yAR