Long-Run Labor Costs of Housing Booms and Busts
61 Pages Posted: 21 Apr 2020 Last revised: 10 May 2023
Date Written: May 10, 2023
Abstract
We show large flows of workers into the real estate agent occupation (REA) during the early 2000s from virtually all parts of the skill, wage, and education spectrums, and especially in areas with non-fundamental house price increases. We find those entering REA in MSAs with house price bubbles end up in occupations paying significantly less in the long-run as compared to similar REA entrants in non-bubble areas. Even in 2017, when house prices and employment return to their pre-crisis levels, REA entrants in Bubble MSAs are in occupations earning about 6% less. These results point to lasting effects of labor allocation decisions in response to distorted price signals.
Keywords: House Prices, Human Capital, Job Switching, Career Choice, Real Estate Agents
JEL Classification: E32, J24, J31, R21, R31
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
