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Title: Why is the Rent So Darn High?

Citation Type: Working Paper

Publication Year: 2019

Abstract: Because of migration. In a spatial equilibrium framework, we show that three-quarters of the CPI rent increase in the United States from 2000 to 2018 is due to increased demand to live in ex ante housing-supply-inelastic cities. Moving one person to a less elastic city raises the average rent because the positive effect on rents in the inelastic city outweighs the negative effect in the elastic one. In these years, the quantitative importance of this migration channel is greater if people are mobile in response to rent changes. Empirically, we show that people have high long-run mobility by estimating that income changes have similar effects on rents across cities regardless of housing supply elasticity. Supporting this migration channel, the cross-sectional pattern of migration demand implied by our model matches patterns of labor-market and amenity changes. JEL Codes: R31, R23, E31

Url: https://poseidon01.ssrn.com/delivery.php?ID=8311110641000060831080910231081111100600430280480030560020831030990990901230201261050970431001070490080281230870830080151270900200250030110530790041081180290171220920180260161170970720670680741010240950860890740

User Submitted?: No

Authors: Howard, Greg; Liebersohn, Jack

Series Title: Fisher College of Business-Working Paper Series

Publication Number: 2018-17

Institution: The Ohio State University

Pages:

Publisher Location:

Data Collections: IPUMS USA

Topics: Housing and Segregation

Countries: United States

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