Marital history and home ownership: evidence from Australia

The relative cost of owning and renting housing and housing affordability have been clearly established as important determinants of home ownership. But the roles of marital status and history have been largely ignored. In this paper we show that both current marital status and past history affect o...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Hendershott, Patric, Ong, Rachel, Wood, Gavin, Flatau, Paul
Format: Journal Article
Published: Academic Press 2009
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/11680
Description
Summary:The relative cost of owning and renting housing and housing affordability have been clearly established as important determinants of home ownership. But the roles of marital status and history have been largely ignored. In this paper we show that both current marital status and past history affect ownership. Past history matters because wealth accumulation is greater among couple households than singles owing largely to economies of scale in housing consumption. Moreover, wealth is lost upon divorce. In effect, past marital history affects the affordability of owner housing. This result is shown in the estimation of model explaining wealth, leverage and tenure choice using Australian datasets.