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Housing Assistance and Eviction Prevention During Compound Crises: Evidence from the COVID-19 Pandemic

Johane Dikgang, Isaiah Magambo, Festus O. Amadu and Alexandre Magnier

No 1735, GLO Discussion Paper Series from Global Labor Organization (GLO)

Abstract: During economic crises, urban policymakers must assess whether housing assistance helps prevent evictions. This study explores the link between housing assistance and eviction risk and how household financial capacity influences this relationship. Using 207,203 observations from the Understanding America Study during COVID-19 and applying recursive bivariate probit models with instrumental variables, we find that housing assistance correlates with a 4.3% decrease in the likelihood of eviction (a 15.6% relative reduction). Notably, among households with credit access, this effect increases to 6.2%, or 44% more than the overall average. We observe a notable inverted- U pattern: households with one to two credit sources see reductions over 39%, whereas those with three or more sources experience much smaller effects, around 4.1%, or a nearly tenfold difference. This challenges the idea that greater financial access always enhances outcomes. The mechanism analysis suggests that this pattern reflects financial stability rather than over-leveraging: households with three or more credit sources tend to be more creditworthy and less dependent on assistance. The results hold across various estimation methods. Although our instrumental variable approach has limitations, the consistent heterogeneity patterns across multiple strategies increase confidence in the finding that housing assistance and moderate credit access work well together. These insights imply that housing assistance programs could be more effective when combined with financial inclusion efforts that focus on credit quality over quantity, with important implications for preventing urban displacement during economic downturns.

Keywords: housing assistance; eviction prevention; financial capacity; instrumental variables; urban policy (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: C26 H53 I38 R21 R28 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2026
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-hre and nep-uep
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