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Volume 17, Issue 4
The Impact of Real Estate Market Knowledge on Tenure Choice
Comment: Courchane and Zorn
Comment: Farley
The Future of Infill Housing in California: Opportunities, Potential, and Feasibility
Child Characteristics and Successful Use of Housing Vouchers:
Federal Colonias Policy in California: Too Broad and Too Narrow
The Role of Housing and Services in Ending Family Homelessness
Volume 17, Issue 3
Volume 17, Issue 2
Volume 17, Issue 1
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Child Characteristics and Successful Use of Housing Vouchers:
Volume 17, Issue 4
2006 

Emily K. Snell and Greg J. Duncan
 
Voucher-based programs have become the most common form of housing
assistance for low-income families in the United States, yet only a slim majority
of households that are offered vouchers actually move with them. This article
uses data from 2,938 households in the Moving to Opportunity demonstration
program to examine whether child characteristics influence the probability that
a household will successfully use a housing voucher to lease-up.
Our results suggest that while many child characteristics have little bearing
on the use of housing vouchers, child health, behavioral, and educational problems,
particularly the presence of multiple problems in a household, do have an
influence. Households with two or more child problems are 7 percentage
points less likely to move than those who have none of these problems or only
one. Results suggest that such families may need additional support to benefit
from housing vouchers or alternative types of affordable housing units.
 
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