Housing

Housing

Showing 21 – 40 of 47 results

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How does saving for retirement interact with buying a main home?

Comment

People on middle and higher incomes need to save privately for retirement, but deciding when and how much to save is difficult. One particular trade-off people face is how much to save in a pension and how much to save for, or spend on, owner occupied housing. In new research published today we examine interactions between housing and and pension saving at two distinct stages of life.

1 December 2020

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The impact of house prices on pension saving in early adulthood

Working Paper

In this paper, we estimate the effect of house prices on whether or not young adults actively save in a private pension. We use job-level data from a survey of employers, matched to average house prices at the level of an individuals’ location of employment, exploiting geographical variation in local house price movements in England over the decade 1997 to 2007.

1 December 2020

The temporary benefit increases beyond 2020-21

Book Chapter
The COVID-19 crisis has led to a profound shock to the labour market, one consequence of which is a rising number of claimants of means-tested benefits and higher entitlements among existing claimants.

9 October 2020

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Avocado toast or no bread on the table? How and why wealth might differ between generations

Comment

Younger generations are accumulating no more wealth in the first decades of their working lives than did those born before them. This is a source of increasing concern. Our research suggests that this lower wealth accumulation need not be due to a change in attitudes among the young - it's not just because they are blowing all their money on avocado toast. Rather it could be because of underlying economic changes - earnings growth has stalled and the returns on savings and housing have fallen. Under these circumstances it is perfectly predictable that younger generations would build up less wealth; indeed, it is reasonable for them to have done so. Given this, policies trying to induce more saving may be counterproductive. The problem is with underlying economic trends, not with the behaviour of young people.

31 October 2019