Abstract
Kamila Sommer, Paul Sullivan, and Randal Verbrugge (2010)
"Run-up in the House Price-Rent Ratio: How Much Can Be Explained by Fundamentals?"
This paper studies the joint dynamics of real house prices and rents over the past
decade. We build a dynamic general equilibrium stochastic life cycle model of housing
tenure choice with fully speci?ed markets for homeownership and rental properties,
and endogenous house prices and rents. Houses are modeled as discrete-size durable
goods which provide shelter services, confer access to collateralized borrowing, provide
sizeable tax advantages, and generate rental income for homeowners who choose to
become landlords. Mortgages are available, but home-buyers must satisfy a minimum
down payment requirement, and home sales and purchases are subject to lumpy ad-
justment costs. Lower interest rates, relaxed lending standards, and higher incomes
are shown to account for over one-half of the increase in the U.S. house price-rent
ratio between 1995 and 2005, and to generate the pattern of rapidly growing house
prices, sluggish rents, increasing homeownership, and rising household indebtedness
observed in the data. The model highlights the importance of accounting for equilib-
rium interactions between the markets for owned and rented property when analyzing
the housing market. These general equilibrium e¤ects can either magnify or reverse
the partial equilibrium e¤ects of changes in fundamentals on house prices, rents, and
homeownership.
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