A Theory of Sticky Rents: Search and Bargaining with Incomplete Information

38 Pages Posted: 25 May 2017

See all articles by Randal Verbrugge

Randal Verbrugge

Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland

Joshua Gallin

Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System

Date Written: May 5, 2017

Abstract

The housing rental market offers a unique laboratory for studying price stickiness. This paper is motivated by two facts: 1. Tenants’ rents are remarkably sticky even though regular and expected recontracting would, by itself, suggest substantial rent flexibility. 2. Rent stickiness varies significantly across structure type; for example, detached unit rents are far stickier than large apartment unit rents. We offer the first theoretical explanation of rent stickiness that is consistent with these facts. In this theory, search and bargaining with incomplete information generates stickiness in the absence of menu costs or other commonly used modeling assumptions. Tenants’ valuations of their units, and whether they are considering other units, are both private information. At lease end, the behavior of risk-averse landlords differs according to the number of units managed. Multi-unit landlords, aided by the law of large numbers, exploit tenant moving costs. When renegotiating rent contracts, they set rent increases that exceed the inflation rate; while the majority of tenants stay, those who place low value on the unit search elsewhere and leave. Landlords with one unit loathe vacancy and offer tenants the identical contract to pre-empt search; only those who really hate the unit leave.

Keywords: Price stickiness, Bargaining, Search, Incomplete information

JEL Classification: C7, C78, D4, D83, D9, E3, R31

Suggested Citation

Verbrugge, Randal and Gallin, Joshua, A Theory of Sticky Rents: Search and Bargaining with Incomplete Information (May 5, 2017). FRB of Cleveland Working Paper No. 17-05, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2973964 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2973964

Randal Verbrugge (Contact Author)

Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland ( email )

East 6th & Superior
Cleveland, OH 44101-1387
United States

Joshua Gallin

Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System ( email )

20th Street and Constitution Avenue NW
Washington, DC 20551
United States
(202) 452-2788 (Phone)
(202) 872-4927 (Fax)

Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?

Paper statistics

Downloads
247
Abstract Views
1,506
Rank
310,057
PlumX Metrics