Abstract
Using data for 1991 to 1997 from the British Household Panel Survey we investigate
the incidence of housing finance problems, evictions and repossessions. Previous research on
repossessions and problematical housing debt has focused on cross-sectional data. This paper
contributes uniquely to the literature by examining the sequence of household and individual
events associated with housing arrears and evictions. Our results show that previous experience
of financial problems have a significant and positive association with the current financial
situation, and that negative financial surprises are the main route into financial difficulties,
controlling for other changes such as divorce or loss of employment. We also confirm the
importance of structural, financial and personal factors in determining housing payment
problems. Families with higher income, where the head or his/her spouse is in work, and those
with greater assets have a lower risk of experiencing problems meeting their housing costs.
Original language | English |
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Number of pages | 23 |
Publication status | Published - 2000 |
Fields of science
- 405002 Agricultural economics
- 502 Economics
- 502001 Labour market policy
- 502002 Labour economics
- 502003 Foreign trade
- 502009 Corporate finance
- 502010 Public finance
- 502012 Industrial management
- 502013 Industrial economics
- 502018 Macroeconomics
- 502020 Market research
- 502021 Microeconomics
- 502025 Econometrics
- 502027 Political economy
- 502039 Structural policy
- 502042 Environmental economics
- 502046 Economic policy
- 502047 Economic theory
- 504014 Gender studies
- 506004 European integration
- 507016 Regional economy
- 303010 Health economics