No "House Lock". Homeowners Relocate to Find Work
There
has been periodic speculation that one factor in the continuing high
unemployment levels is "house lock," or the reluctance of households to sell
their homes in a declining price environment.
This, the theory goes, may create a geographic mismatch between the
locations of available workers and available job openings. If this is true then it follows that
household migration should be relatively greater among renters than owners in
the current market and should be higher in areas where home prices have been
more stable compared to areas that have suffered large declines in home
values. It also should follow that
migration would be higher in households - whether renters or owners - where the
head is unemployed.
The
Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago recently completed a study that found that none
of these conditions apply to the current recession and concluded that "there is
little empirical evidence that house lock has been an important driver of the
recent high unemployment rate."
The
study, conducted by Daniel Aaronson, the bank's vice president and economic
advisor and Jonathan Davis, an associate economist, used the U.S. Census
Bureau's Survey of Income and Program Participation (SIPP) as the basis for
their study. SIPP is a large
representative sample of non-military households which is interviewed every
four months (called a wave) for two to four years. The surveys overlap (one group is interviewed
in January, another in February, etc.) which allows for a month-by-month
analysis of migration rates, however, when a cohort's two to four year tenure
is ended it is replaced by another group as the next wave begins. This results in occasional four month gaps in
the data. The SIPP data only allowed for
evaluation of state-to-state migration.
In
a given year, fewer than 2 percent of all SIPP households cross a state border,
but migration is three to four times more common for renter households than for
homeowners. This ratio has held
throughout the sample period, therefore over the past 25 years a significant
portion of geographic relocation has been among households unencumbered by
owning a house.
Aaronson
and Davis compared the average four-month state-to-state migration rates during
the last three years of the economic expansion (2005-2007) to the slightly shorter December 2008 to July
2010 period coinciding with the worst of the recession, and found that
homeowner migration rates from 0.0025 during the2005-07 period to 0.0019 during
the December 2008-July 2010 period, about 0.02 percent. But renter migration rates dropped as well
and did so roughly in tandem. Furthermore,
the results are very similar when the recent period is compared to rates
through the entire 2002-2007 economic expansion and when compared to the
differences between earlier periods of growth and subsequent recessions In
fact, the authors say, "Given the extent of the downturn in 2009-09, the
decline in homeowner and renter mobility was rather tame this time around."
House
lock was no more of a factor in those states suffering the most severe housing
busts. In fact, during 2009 and early
2010 homeowner state-to-state mobility rates decreased more for households in
states that experienced smaller price declines.
Even in the five states with the largest drop in house prices there was
no evidence that homeowners were migrating out at a historically unusual rate.
Finally,
there was no evidence found that households where the head was out of work were
more likely to move, a fact that held true again for both home owners and
renters.
The
authors put forth two caveats for their findings. The study as mentioned earlier was
constrained to looking at state to state migration but a limited analysis of
in-state migration data, especially in larger states where there may be more
than one distinct labor market, indicates that homeowner in-state migration also
fell during the 2009-2010 period but
there are indications that renter migration may have fallen less. The second caveat is that the study was
conducted during a period when unemployment was at 9.5 percent so the lack of
jobs may have contributed to the lack of mobility rather than the reverse. It could be that once the demand for labor
picks up any geographic mismatch will become more apparent.