The aggregate and distributional impacts of residence policy relaxation
Government often designs strict policy to control the conversion rate from temporary to permanent residents. The residence status may directly affect individuals’ migration decisions and housing tenure choices. We present a dynamic spatial equilibrium framework to study the aggregate and distributio...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-1704202023-09-12T01:39:33Z The aggregate and distributional impacts of residence policy relaxation Tang, Rongsheng Tang, Yang Zhang, Rongjie School of Social Sciences Social sciences::Economic theory Housing Market Residence Policy Government often designs strict policy to control the conversion rate from temporary to permanent residents. The residence status may directly affect individuals’ migration decisions and housing tenure choices. We present a dynamic spatial equilibrium framework to study the aggregate and distributional impacts of residence policy relaxation with a focus on the housing market. The DID approach treating the recent hukou policy reform in China as a shock reveals hukou policy relaxation causes housing prices in the treatment cities to be 4.9% higher than the unaffected cities. The impacts are stronger in cities where obtaining hukou was harder. The model is calibrated to the Chinese economy and predicts that hukou policy relaxation can bring a positive spillover effect to those unaffected cities’ welfare. If hukou policy reform were implemented in those super-mega Chinese cities, housing prices would grow by 2.3%, but the welfare gain equivalent to 3.1% of their current levels. Rongsheng Tang thanks for the financial support from the National Natural Science Foundation of China (No. 71803112). Rongjie Zhang thanks National Natural Science Foundation of China (No. 71874093 and 72174100) for financial support. 2023-09-12T01:39:33Z 2023-09-12T01:39:33Z 2022 Journal Article Tang, R., Tang, Y. & Zhang, R. (2022). The aggregate and distributional impacts of residence policy relaxation. Journal of Real Estate Finance and Economics. https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11146-022-09912-1 0895-5638 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/170420 10.1007/s11146-022-09912-1 2-s2.0-85132280714 en Journal of Real Estate Finance and Economics © 2022 The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature. All rights reserved. |
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Social sciences::Economic theory Housing Market Residence Policy Tang, Rongsheng Tang, Yang Zhang, Rongjie The aggregate and distributional impacts of residence policy relaxation |
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Government often designs strict policy to control the conversion rate from temporary to permanent residents. The residence status may directly affect individuals’ migration decisions and housing tenure choices. We present a dynamic spatial equilibrium framework to study the aggregate and distributional impacts of residence policy relaxation with a focus on the housing market. The DID approach treating the recent hukou policy reform in China as a shock reveals hukou policy relaxation causes housing prices in the treatment cities to be 4.9% higher than the unaffected cities. The impacts are stronger in cities where obtaining hukou was harder. The model is calibrated to the Chinese economy and predicts that hukou policy relaxation can bring a positive spillover effect to those unaffected cities’ welfare. If hukou policy reform were implemented in those super-mega Chinese cities, housing prices would grow by 2.3%, but the welfare gain equivalent to 3.1% of their current levels. |
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School of Social Sciences |
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School of Social Sciences Tang, Rongsheng Tang, Yang Zhang, Rongjie |
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Article |
author |
Tang, Rongsheng Tang, Yang Zhang, Rongjie |
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Tang, Rongsheng |
title |
The aggregate and distributional impacts of residence policy relaxation |
title_short |
The aggregate and distributional impacts of residence policy relaxation |
title_full |
The aggregate and distributional impacts of residence policy relaxation |
title_fullStr |
The aggregate and distributional impacts of residence policy relaxation |
title_full_unstemmed |
The aggregate and distributional impacts of residence policy relaxation |
title_sort |
aggregate and distributional impacts of residence policy relaxation |
publishDate |
2023 |
url |
https://hdl.handle.net/10356/170420 |
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1779156397144932352 |