Mortgage market, wages and homeownership
ISSN: 0144-3585
Article publication date: 20 October 2023
Issue publication date: 9 July 2024
Abstract
Purpose
This study deals with the main issues concerning the interplay between homeownership and labour market outcomes, namely (1) the relation between homeownership and labour market outcomes, at both the individual level and the aggregate level, and (2) the relation between homeownership and human capital.
Design/methodology/approach
This paper is both theoretical and empirical. A search and matching model of the labour market is developed to explain the strong relation between mortgage markets and wages. A regional panel analysis in Italy is used to verify the interplay between homeownership and wages.
Findings
Homeownership is not, by itself, a condition for receiving higher wages, but rather higher wages increase the probability to become a homeowner, since they positively affect the probability of acquiring a mortgage from the bank. Eventually, wages cause homeownership, but the reverse may not be true.
Research limitations/implications
The paper focuses on the labour market, while the housing market model is restricted to the mortgage market.
Practical implications
The positive effect of homeownership on wages is hard to theoretically formalise and is not empirically proven. Before investigating a (potential) bidirectional relationship between homeownership and labour market outcomes, therefore, the related literature should assume a new theoretical link between homeowners and wages.
Social implications
The result that “homeownership is not, by itself, a condition for receiving higher wages” has positive implications for human and social development. If homeownership could lead to better labour market outcomes, indeed, socio-economic inequalities would increase in the society, because homeownership would be the starting point of a “lucky” circle that increases the well-being of people who are already wealthy.
Originality/value
First, this study clearly explains why the microeconomic result that homeowners are more likely to be employed than tenants is consistent – at the aggregate level – with a negative relation between homeownership and better labour market outcomes. Second, the related literature has largely ignored the social implications of the topic. A potential bidirectional relation between homeownership and (better) labour market outcomes, indeed, could imply an increase in the well-being of people who are already wealthy.
Keywords
Acknowledgements
The author wishes to thank the two anonymous referees for the many comments and suggestions which have significantly improved the work.
Citation
Lisi, G. (2024), "Mortgage market, wages and homeownership", Journal of Economic Studies, Vol. 51 No. 5, pp. 979-992. https://doi.org/10.1108/JES-08-2023-0401
Publisher
:Emerald Publishing Limited
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