Residential Mobility and Housing Equity in Japan
This paper draws on five waves of Japan household longitudinal data (Keio Household Panel Survey, KHPS) and estimates a conditional fixed effects logit model to investigate the effect of Japanese government policy on owner-to-owner residential moves. We examine whether housing equity constraints deter owner-to-owner residential mobility and whether government policy aimed at addressing this constraint has a timely impact on residential moves. The specific policy we examine is the implementation of the income tax deduction system that permits the carrying over of capital losses for owner-occupied households. These tax policies were devised to cope with the severe equity constraints that followed the bursting of Japan's asset Bubble in the early 1990s. We find that housing equity constraints deter residential moves and that government policy has an impact on residential mobility, especially in the same year and the following year after the introduction of this tax system. The implementation of an income tax deduction system linked to capital losses increases owners' mobility to another owner-occupied housing immediately after the introduction of this tax revision, especially for higher income households (often self-employed) when future housing price depreciation is anticipated.
Year of publication: |
2008
|
---|---|
Authors: | Seko, Miki ; Sumita, Kazuto |
Institutions: | Faculty of Economics, Keio University |
Saved in:
freely available
Saved in favorites
Similar items by person
-
Downward-Sloping Term Structure of Lease Rates: A Puzzle
Seko, Miki, (2012)
-
Earthquake Risk in Japan: Consumers' Risk Mitigation Responses after the Great East Japan Earthquake
Naoi, Michio, (2012)
-
Naoi, Michio, (2010)
- More ...