Publication Type

Journal Article

Version

publishedVersion

Publication Date

1-2012

Abstract

This paper uses a semiparametric homeownership model to estimate and to decompose the household-level white-black homeownership gap into an endowment component and a residual component across the distribution of homeownership rates. We find that the racial gap differs across homeownership rates and that studies that examine the gap only at the mean may be misleading. We also find that although household characteristics explain the homeownership gap for most households, there is a substantial portion of the gap that remains unexplained for households with a very low propensity to own homes. A comparison of the estimates from the semiparametric model and a probit model suggests that the semiparametric approach is able to capture the heterogeneity structure between the ethnic groups, particularly in the tails of the distribution. To illustrate the flexibility of our household-level approach, we decompose the homeownership gap in cities of varying levels of segregation.

Keywords

Homeownership, Race, Segregation

Discipline

Economics | Race and Ethnicity

Research Areas

Applied Microeconomics

Publication

Regional Science and Urban Economics

Volume

42

Issue

1-2

First Page

52

Last Page

62

ISSN

0166-0462

Identifier

10.1016/j.regsciurbeco.2011.05.002

Publisher

Elsevier

Additional URL

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.regsciurbeco.2011.05.002

Share

COinS