We investigate whether different ages of first-time house buying lead to persistent differences in homeownership between cohorts. Our data span nearly 40 years and multiple cycles of England's volatile house prices. Ownership rates at thirty have differed substantially, with a significant negative association with prices. The persistence of differences is assessed using synthetic cohort techniques. Two methods of dealing with measurement error problems both indicate that cohorts with low ownership rates at thirty catch up almost all of the ownership gap by forty. Earlier access to homeownership may result in the ownership of slightly larger homes at around forty.
Authors
![Matthew Wakefield](/sites/default/files/styles/square_desktop/public/2022-08/Wakefield_cropped.jpg?itok=syMVUpoD)
Research Associate University of Bologna
Matthew is Associate Professor at the University of Bologna focusing on consumption and savings choices and how policy affects them.
Research Associate University of Bologna
Renata is an Associate Professor at the University of Bologna and IFS Research Associate, working on household consumption, saving and labour supply.
![Thomas Crossley](/sites/default/files/styles/square_desktop/public/2022-07/Tom%20Crossley.jpg?itok=8BNVWAtq)
Research Fellow University of Michigan
Tom is a Research Fellow at IFS, a Research Professor for the Institute for Social Research at the University of Michigan.
Journal article details
- DOI
- 10.1111/ecca.12157
- Publisher
- Wiley
- Issue
- Volume 82, Issue 1, September 2015
Suggested citation
R, Bottazzi and T, Crossley and M, Wakefield. (2015). 'First-time house buying and catch-up: a cohort study' 82, Issue 1(2015)
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