Household Formation and Tenure Choice: Did the Great Irish Housing Bust Alter Consumer Behaviour?
Authors
David Byrne
Central Bank of Ireland
David Duffy
Irish Business and Employers Confederation
John FitzGerald
The Economic and Social Research Institute
Keywords:
tenure choice, housing market, Ireland
Abstract
This paper analyses the household formation and tenure choice decisions of different age cohorts in the Irish market. We use data covering the years 2001 to 2011, a period which encompasses the boom, bubble and collapse in the Irish housing market. We find that the household formation decision is affected by the rent-to-income ratio while tenure choice depends upon the difference between rent and the user cost of housing, a notional cost of services derived from owning a home. After the crash, the balance of these costs favoured renting, resulting in a decrease in owner occupancy. In addition, we find that falling average rents caused entry to the housing market to become more affordable, and that this was linked to significantly higher household formation rates.