Mortgage finance and culture

Using a nationally representative sample of 12,344 immigrants from 41 different countries of ancestry living in Spain in 2007, we find that the higher the housing‐loan penetration in the country of ancestry, the higher the likelihood of having a mortgage in Spain. Similarly, the higher the mortgage...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of regional science 2018-09, Vol.58 (4), p.786-821
1. Verfasser: Rodríguez‐Planas, Núria
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description Using a nationally representative sample of 12,344 immigrants from 41 different countries of ancestry living in Spain in 2007, we find that the higher the housing‐loan penetration in the country of ancestry, the higher the likelihood of having a mortgage in Spain. Similarly, the higher the mortgage depth in the country of ancestry, the higher the present value of the monthly mortgage payments. Our results suggest that social norms regarding mortgage finance in the country of ancestry matter in determining immigrants’ mortgage finance in the host country. More specifically, the effect of social norms on the decision to have a mortgage (the extensive margin) and the amount of the mortgage payments (the intensive margin) is about one third and tenth the size of the effect of having a college degree on mortgage debt, respectively. Evidence of strong persistence of culture among those with longer tenure in the host country, those who immigrated as children or young adults, and second‐generation immigrants suggests that vertical transmission of beliefs (from parents to children) is a plausible channel of transmission. Perhaps most importantly, we find that cultural attitudes regarding property rights are most relevant when explaining individuals’ decision to get a mortgage, but those regarding credit information matter most when explaining the amount of the mortgage debt.
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source Wiley Online Library Journals Frontfile Complete; PAIS Index; Business Source Complete
subjects Adults
Attitudes
Children
Cultural attitudes
Cultural property
culture
Debt
Disease transmission
epidemiological approach
Finance
formal and informal institutions
Host country
Housing
housing‐loan penetration
Immigrants
Intergenerational transmission
mortgage depth
Noncitizens
Norms
Parents
Parents & parenting
Payments
Penetration
Present value
Property rights
Regulation AB
Social norms
Tenure
Young adults
title Mortgage finance and culture
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