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Landlords and Access to Opportunity

Authors :
Dionissi Aliprantis
Hal Martin
David C. Phillips
Source :
Working paper (Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland).
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland, 2019.

Abstract

Despite being eligible for use in any neighborhood, housing choice vouchers tend to be redeemed in low-opportunity neighborhoods. This paper investigates how landlords contribute to this outcome and how they respond to efforts to change it. We leverage a policy change in Washington, DC, that increased voucher rental payments only in high-rent neighborhoods. Using two waves of a correspondence experiment that bracket the policy change, we show that most opportunity landlords screen out prospective voucher tenants, and we detect no change in average screening behavior after a $450 per month increase in voucher payments. In lease-up data, however, enough landlords do respond to increased payments to equalize the flow of voucher tenants into high- vs. low-rent neighborhoods. Using tax data and listings from a website specializing in subsidized housing, we characterize a group of marginal opportunity landlords who respond to higher payments. Marginal opportunity landlords are relatively rare, list their units near market rates, operate on a small scale, and negatively select into the voucher program based on hard-to-observe differences in unit quality.

Details

ISSN :
25737953
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Working paper (Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland)
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....bcf5d8f7e3b0a5441dbd20b3a26feb13
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.26509/frbc-wp-201902r