event Publicación: 03/10/2024
Autor: Julia Fonseca (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign)
Co autores: Lu Liu and Pierre Mabille
Abstract: U.S. mortgage borrowers are "locked in": unwilling to sell their house and move, as that would require giving up low fixed mortgage rates for higher current rates. We study the general equilibrium effects of mortgage lock-in on house prices, mobility, and homeownership and evaluate policies aimed at unlocking mortgage lock-in. To do so, we design a spatial housing ladder model that captures moving patterns across different housing market segments. Households can move between locations differing in economic opportunity and cost of living, and within the housing ladder by deciding whether to rent, own a starter home, or own a trade-up home. In equilibrium, house prices and rents are endogenously determined by household mobility within and between locations, and are thus impacted by lock-in. We provide new empirical evidence on moving behavior along the housing ladder and over the life cycle and calibrate the model with rich microdata from 2024. While higher rates reduce the demand of households who would otherwise move up the housing ladder, we show that mortgage lock-in substantially reduces downsizing and exits from homeownership, increasing net demand for housing and resulting in higher house prices. We further evaluate the equilibrium effects of the proposed 2024 Mortgage Relief Credit, which would provide a $10,000 subsidy to sellers of starter homes. We find that the policy modestly increases first-time home buying and has larger effects on upward mobility at the top of the housing ladder. However, upward mobility within the housing ladder comes at the cost of renters and starter homeowners moving from highto low-opportunity areas, as house prices in higher-priced areas increase.