Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
982965 Regional Science and Urban Economics 2016 12 Pages PDF
Abstract

•We simulate metro home price changes from reforming the mortgage interest deduction.•We show three different reform scenarios with both elastic and inelastic supply.•We estimate changes to leverage and itemization behavior in response to reform.•Eliminating the mortgage interest deduction reduces prices by 4 to 14%.

We simulate changes to metropolitan area home prices from reforming the Mortgage Interest Deduction (MID). Price simulations are based on an extended user cost model that incorporates two dimensions of behavioral change in home buyers: sensitivity of borrowing and the propensity to use tax deductions. We simulate prices with both inelastic and elastic supply. Our results show a wide range of price effects across metropolitan areas and prospective policies. Considering behavioral change and no supply elasticity, eliminating the MID results in average home price declines as steep as 13.5% in Washington, D.C., and as small as 3.5% in Miami-Fort Lauderdale, FL. Converting the MID to a 15% refundable credit reduces prices by as much as 1.4% in San Jose, CA, San Francisco, CA, and Washington, D.C. and increases average price in other metropolitan areas by as much as 12.1% (Miami-Fort Lauderdale). Accounting for market elasticities produces price estimates that are on average 36% as large as standard estimates.

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Social Sciences and Humanities Economics, Econometrics and Finance Economics and Econometrics
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