Housing uncertainty and the transition to parenthood among Britain's "generation rent"
Housing uncertainty and the transition to parenthood among Britain's "generation rent"
The literature suggests a positive link between home ownership and transition to parenthood. However, couples’ preferences to become homeowners before having their first child have been undermined by rising housing uncertainty and housing unaffordability over recent decades. Britain is an archetype example: home ownership rates have fallen markedly among young adults as a result of low wages, precarious employment, reductions in the availability of mortgage credit, and rising house prices,generating a housing crisis. Using longitudinal data from the British Household Panel Survey (1991-2008) and the United Kingdom Household Longitudinal Study (2009-2016), and applying multilevel discrete-time event-history techniques on a sample of women aged 18-42, we investigate whether and how the link between housing tenure and first birth has changed over recent decades in Britain. We find that, in comparison to the 1990s, the likelihood of becoming a parent has declined among homeowners in recent years, whereas childbearing rates among private renters have remained stable.Thus owner occupiers and private renters have become more similar in terms of their likelihood of entering parenthood. Overall, our findings question the classical micro level assumption of a positive link between home ownership and transition to parenthood, at least among Britain’s “Generation Rent”.
University of Southampton
Tocchioni, Valentina
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Berrington, Ann
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Vignoli, Daniele
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Vitali, Agnese
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19 September 2019
Tocchioni, Valentina
e6f6d528-2b5c-4d6f-87ac-dd53fbf8c3eb
Berrington, Ann
bd0fc093-310d-4236-8126-ca0c7eb9ddde
Vignoli, Daniele
f4250619-e386-4c1f-a931-80247c8127fe
Vitali, Agnese
56acb6b8-5161-4106-9e73-20712840d675
Tocchioni, Valentina, Berrington, Ann, Vignoli, Daniele and Vitali, Agnese
(2019)
Housing uncertainty and the transition to parenthood among Britain's "generation rent"
(CPC Working Paper, 92)
Southampton.
University of Southampton
40pp.
Record type:
Monograph
(Working Paper)
Abstract
The literature suggests a positive link between home ownership and transition to parenthood. However, couples’ preferences to become homeowners before having their first child have been undermined by rising housing uncertainty and housing unaffordability over recent decades. Britain is an archetype example: home ownership rates have fallen markedly among young adults as a result of low wages, precarious employment, reductions in the availability of mortgage credit, and rising house prices,generating a housing crisis. Using longitudinal data from the British Household Panel Survey (1991-2008) and the United Kingdom Household Longitudinal Study (2009-2016), and applying multilevel discrete-time event-history techniques on a sample of women aged 18-42, we investigate whether and how the link between housing tenure and first birth has changed over recent decades in Britain. We find that, in comparison to the 1990s, the likelihood of becoming a parent has declined among homeowners in recent years, whereas childbearing rates among private renters have remained stable.Thus owner occupiers and private renters have become more similar in terms of their likelihood of entering parenthood. Overall, our findings question the classical micro level assumption of a positive link between home ownership and transition to parenthood, at least among Britain’s “Generation Rent”.
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Published date: 19 September 2019
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Local EPrints ID: 434391
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/434391
ISSN: 2042-4116
PURE UUID: bd09954e-519f-4dab-b042-042bbee357ba
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Date deposited: 23 Sep 2019 16:30
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 02:40
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Contributors
Author:
Valentina Tocchioni
Author:
Daniele Vignoli
Author:
Agnese Vitali
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