Journal of Housing Research, Volume 5, Issue 1Office of Housing Policy Research, Fannie Mae, 1994 - Housing |
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Adjustable-rate adjustment allow Americans analysis appear application ARMs asset Australia average basis Bedrooms benefits borrower budget calculated changes characteristics Chicago choice coefficients construction consumer contract conversion costs decision default default risk demand depends depository institutions determined differences Economics effect elasticity endowment equation estimated expected factors four FRMs Given hedonic Hence higher homeownership households housing Houston immigrant important income group increase initial interest investors issues Italy Journal land lenders loan lower means measures mortgage bankers mortgage market Note occupancy offered option origination ownership percent percentage period Pittsburgh points population portfolio positive prepayment present primary probability purchase race ratio rejection relative rent require Research respect sample San Diego securities servicing significant simulation single-family Statistical strategies structure submarket supply survey tenure units University Urban user cost utility values variable whites
Popular passages
Page 136 - Changes in the Relative Incentives to Invest in Housing: Australia, Sweden and the United States, Journal of Housing Economics 2, p.
Page 117 - Young, and two anonymous reviewers for helpful comments and to the National Housing Strategy, Department of Health, Housing, and Community Services, and the Social Science Data Archives, Research School of Social Sciences, Australian National University, for making available the Housing and Location Choice Survey data.
Page 20 - Brown, James, and Harvey Rosen. 1982. "On the Estimation of Structural Hedonic Models.
Page 5 - Section 222 requires a down payment of 3 percent of the first $25,000 and 5 percent of any amount above $25,000 up to a maximum mortgage amount of $60,000 as indicated earlier.
Page 23 - Journal of Housing Research 4(1): 73-129. Anas. A. and RJ Arnott (1994). "The Chicago Prototype Housing Market Model with Tenure Choice and Its Policy Applications.
Page 136 - A Model of Housing Tenure Choice in Australia. Journal of Urban Economics, 37, 161-175.
Page 102 - The variable itself is derived from the 1990 Census of Population and Housing (US Bureau of the Census, 1990) data using a function in the ARC/INFO CIS software package.
Page 116 - Linneman, Peter, and Susan M. Wachter. 1989. The Impacts of Borrowing Constraints on Homeownership.
Page 137 - National Population Council (1990) Immigration and Housing in the Major Cities. Canberra: AGPS. National Population Council (1991) Population Issues and Australia's Future.