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Does Credit Quality Matter for Homeownership?
Irina Barakova Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System Raphael W. Bostic University of Southern California - School of Policy Planning and Development (SPPD) Paul S. Calem LoanPerformance - Vice President of Product Research Susan M. Wachter University of Pennsylvania - The Wharton School - Real Estate Department January 6, 2003 U of Penn Law & Econ Research Paper 03-40 Abstract: In this study, we test for the role of credit quality as a factor in limiting access to homeownership. While micro-level household data on wealth and income are available for assessing income- and wealth-based constraints to homeownership, lack of data on household credit ratings has precluded evaluation of credit quality as a potential barrier to homeownership. The study, for the first time, measures the relative importance of credit-, income-, and wealth-based constraints and estimates how the effects of these constraints have evolved over the past decade. The results show that financing constraints continue to have an important impact on potential homebuyers. The wealth constraint has the largest impact, although its importance declined substantially during the 1990s. Credit quality based constraints have become more important barriers to homeownership during the 1990s, mostly reflecting an increase in the number of households with impaired credit quality. Thus, both wealth and credit constraints persist as barriers to the attainment of homeownership.
Keywords: Credit quality, homeownership, barriers to homeownership, household credit rating, financial constraints and homeownership Working Paper SeriesDate posted: December 14, 2003 ; Last revised: February 07, 2004Suggested CitationContact Information
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