Nominal Loss Aversion in the Housing Market and Household Mobility
Risto Hurmeranta and
Teemu Lyytikäinen
No 178, Working Papers from VATT Institute for Economic Research
Abstract:
Households are averse to realizing nominal housing market losses. Reduced household mobility, in an attempt to avoid selling at a loss, implies misallocation of housing and can affect the functioning of the labor market. However, direct evidence on mobility responses is scarce. This paper studies the effect of expected losses on homeowners’ propensity to move using administrative data on housing transactions matched with detailed data on household characteristics. We use an ensemble machine learning method to estimate expected prices for the universe of apartments in the three largest travel-to-work areas in Finland in 2006–2018. We find that homeowners below the zero-return cutoff are 51% less likely to sell than those above the cutoff. The effect of loss aversion on mobility is somewhat smaller than the effect on sales. Homeowners with an expected loss are more likely to move without selling their previous home. Renting out their previous apartment seems to enable homeowners to move without realizing nominal losses. Expected losses also reduce inter-regional mobility, which suggests that loss aversion can lead to misallocation of the labor force.
Keywords: Nominal loss aversion; housing market; household mobility; R21; R23; R31; fi=Asuntopolitiikka|sv=Bostadspolitik|en=Housing policy| (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2025
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-upt
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