The effect of house prices on fertility: Evidence from Canada
Authors: Jeremy Clark and Ana Ferrer
Overview
Abstract (English)
Persistent house price increases are a likely candidate for consideration in fertility decisions. Theoretically, higher housing prices will cause renters to desire fewer additional children, but home owners to desire more children if they already have sufficient housing and low substitution between children and other “goods”, and fewer children otherwise. In this paper, the authors combine longitudinal data from the Canadian Survey of Labour Income and Dynamics (SLID) and averaged housing price data from the Canadian Real Estate Association to estimate the effect of housing prices on fertility in a housing market that has historically been less volatile and more conservative than its American counterpart has. They ask whether changes in lagged housing price affect the marginal fertility of homeowner and renter women aged 18-45. They present results both excluding and including those who move outside their initial real estate board area, using initial area housing prices as an instrument in the latter case. For homeowners, but not renters, the authors predominantly find evidence that lagged housing prices have a positive effect on marginal fertility and possibly on completed fertility. These pro-natal effects are confined to non-movers.
Abstract (French)
Please note that abstracts only appear in the language of the publication and might not have a translation.
Details
Type | Journal article |
---|---|
Author | Jeremy Clark and Ana Ferrer |
Publication Year | 2019 |
Title | The effect of house prices on fertility: Evidence from Canada |
Volume | 13 |
Journal Name | Economics: The Open-Access, Open-Assessment E-Journal |
Number | 2019-38 |
Pages | Jan-32 |
Publication Language | English |
- Jeremy Clark
- Jeremy Clark and Ana Ferrer
- The effect of house prices on fertility: Evidence from Canada
- Economics: The Open-Access, Open-Assessment E-Journal
- 13
- 2019
- 2019-38
- Jan-32