Volume 19, Issue 4
Volume 19, Issue 3
Volume 19, Issue 2
Volume 19, Issue 1
Volume 18, Issue 4
Volume 18, Issue 3
Volume 18, Issue 2
Volume 18, Issue 1
Testing a Typology of Family Homelessness
Comment: Ellen L. Bassuk
Comment: Martha R. Burt
Comment: Fred Karnas
Quantity, Quality, or Both?
Closing the Gap between Places of Work and Residence
Subsidized Housing, Housing Prices, and the Living Arrangements of Unmarried Mothers
Attitudes toward Travel and Land Use and Choice of Residential Neighborhood Type
Shared-Equity Mortgages, Housing Affordability, and Homeownership
Volume 17, Issue 4
Volume 17, Issue 3
Volume 17, Issue 2
Volume 17, Issue 1
Volume 16, Issues 3 and 4
Volume 16, Issue 2
Volume 16, Issue 1
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Volume 14, Issues 1 and 2
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Shared-Equity Mortgages, Housing Affordability, and Homeownership
Volume 18, Issue 1
2007
 
Andrew Caplin, James H. Carr, Frederick Pollock, Zhong Yi Tong, Kheng Mei Tan, Trivikraman Thampy

Although the homeownership rate rose from 65 percent in 1995 to 69 percent in 2005, this rise appears difficult to sustain. We argue that the development of new shared-equity mortgages (SEMs) that blur the lines between debt and equity would propel further advances in homeownership. The rationale for these mortgages is that the broad financial markets would value shares in individual housing returns more highly than hard-pressed prospective homeowners do.

We describe a new class of SEMs and provide survey evidence that most households would prefer them to interest-only and other currently popular mortgages. Financial simulations confirm the value of the securitized SEMs to investors. We present computations suggesting that an increase in the overall U.S. homeownership rate of between 1 percent and 1.5 percent would likely result from the development of SEM markets.
Andrew Caplin, James H. Carr, Frederick Pollock, Zhong Yi Tong, Kheng Mei Tan, Trivikraman Thampy

Although the homeownership rate rose from 65 percent in 1995 to 69 percent in 2005, this rise appears difficult to sustain. We argue that the development of new shared-equity mortgages (SEMs) that blur the lines between debt and equity would propel further advances in homeownership. The rationale for these mortgages is that the broad financial markets would value shares in individual housing returns more highly than hard-pressed prospective homeowners do.

We describe a new class of SEMs and provide survey evidence that most households would prefer them to interest-only and other currently popular mortgages. Financial simulations confirm the value of the securitized SEMs to investors. We present computations suggesting that an increase in the overall U.S. homeownership rate of between 1 percent and 1.5 percent would likely result from the development of SEM markets.
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