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Tenure transitions at the edges of ownership: Reinforcing or challenging the status quo?

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 18:48 authored by Rachel ViforJ, William Clark, Susan Smith, Gavin WoodGavin Wood, William Lisowski, N.T. Truong, Melek Cigdem
This paper provides an empirical overview of housing tenure transitions in Australia, the UK and the USA during a period of unprecedented economic instability in 2001–2017. Focusing on the neglected theme of episodic homeownership, we profile those who straddle the tenure divide by moving into and out of renting from time to time. Using panel data we model this ‘churn’ in three jurisdictions, showing that even the dislocation of a global financial crisis does not eclipse the independent impact of life events during rental spells. We find that whatever individuals bring from prior ownership, shocks occurring during a rental spell – unemployment, loss of a partner, additional dependent children – can be sufficient to prevent return. Churning is also health- and age-selective, adding ‘drop-out’ among the old to ‘lock-out’ for the young as a policy concern. Even those who successfully regain owner-occupation increase their credit and investment risks without necessarily improving their housing position. Overall ‘churners’ are a diverse constituency whose life chances are powerfully shaped by episodic ownership: what they share is time spent in an unacknowledged, under-instituted space between tenures where there is latent demand for innovative financial services and untapped potential for radical policy shifts.

Funding

Edges of home ownership

Australian Research Council

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Home ownership and housing wealth: ageing and intergenerational pathways

Australian Research Council

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History

Related Materials

  1. 1.
    DOI - Is published in 10.1177/0308518X211038946
  2. 2.
    ISSN - Is published in 0308518X

Journal

Environment and Planning A

Volume

53

Issue

8

Start page

1993

End page

2011

Total pages

19

Publisher

Sage

Place published

United Kingdom

Language

English

Copyright

© The Author(s) 2021

Former Identifier

2006113161

Esploro creation date

2023-04-28

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