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Public Education and Intergenerational Housing Wealth Effects

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Abstract

While rising house prices are known to benefit existing homeowners, we document a new channel through which house price shocks have intergenerational wealth e ects. Using panel data from school zones within a large U.S. school district, we find that higher local house prices lead to improvements in local school quality, thereby increasing children's human capital and future incomes. We quantify this housing wealth channel using an overlapping generations model with neighborhood choice, spatial equilibrium, and endogenous school quality. We find that housing market shocks generate large intergenerational wealth effects that account for around one third of total housing wealth effects.

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  • Michael Gilraine, James Graham and Angela Zheng, 2024. "Public Education and Intergenerational Housing Wealth Effects," Discussion Papers dp24-07, Department of Economics, Simon Fraser University.
  • Handle: RePEc:sfu:sfudps:dp24-07
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