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Objective Housing Sales and Rent Prices in Representative Household Surveys: Implications for Wealth, Inequality, Housing Market, and Affordability Statistics

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Peer-reviewed

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Abstract

Many economic analyses require hypothetical but realistic sales and rent prices for properties representative of the housing stock and reflecting current market conditions. To achieve this, we replace subjectively reported prices in a representative household survey in Luxembourg with objectified hedonic imputations informed by observable market data. Thus, we propose a powerful tool for assessing the health and affordability of housing markets, compiling housing‐related statistics and simulating hypothetical scenarios. This approach also enables us to test for the reliability of survey responses. When switching to objectified values, we detect shifts in the wealth distribution, large regional variation in market indicators, and striking affordability concerns: only 18 percent of Luxembourg's renters could theoretically afford to purchase their inhabited dwellings given current market conditions. Further, participants' tendency to mis‐estimate market values strongly correlates with tenure length and type, dwelling type, income, and wealth.

Description

Publication status: Published

Journal Title

Review of Income and Wealth

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0034-6586
1475-4991

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Publisher

Wiley

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Except where otherwised noted, this item's license is described as Attribution 4.0 International
Sponsorship
FNR Luxembourg National Research Fund, CORE Grant No. 3886 (ASSESS)