Location-Efficient Mortgages : is the rationale sound?
By: BLACKMAN, Allen.
Contributor(s): KRUPNICK, Alan.
Material type: ArticlePublisher: 2001Journal of Policy Analysis and Management 20, 4, p. 633-649Abstract: Location efficient mortgage (LEM) programs are an increasingly popular approach to combating urban sprawl. LEMs allow families who want to live in densely populated, transit-rich communities to obtain a larger mortgage with a smaller down payment than traditional underwrinting guidelines allow. LEMs are premised on the proposition that homeowners in such "location-efficient" areas can safely be allowed to breach underwriting guidelines designed to prevent mortgage default because they have lower that average automobile-related transportation expenses and more income available for mortgage payments. This paper employs records of more than 8000 FHA-insured mortagages matched with data on various measures of locatio efficiency to test this proportion. The results suggest that it does not hold and that LEMs - like other low-down-payment mortgage programs - will raise mortgage default rates. This cost must be weighed against any potential anti-sprawl benefits LEMs may haveItem type | Current location | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Periódico | Biblioteca Graciliano Ramos | Periódico | Not for loan |
Location efficient mortgage (LEM) programs are an increasingly popular approach to combating urban sprawl. LEMs allow families who want to live in densely populated, transit-rich communities to obtain a larger mortgage with a smaller down payment than traditional underwrinting guidelines allow. LEMs are premised on the proposition that homeowners in such "location-efficient" areas can safely be allowed to breach underwriting guidelines designed to prevent mortgage default because they have lower that average automobile-related transportation expenses and more income available for mortgage payments. This paper employs records of more than 8000 FHA-insured mortagages matched with data on various measures of locatio efficiency to test this proportion. The results suggest that it does not hold and that LEMs - like other low-down-payment mortgage programs - will raise mortgage default rates. This cost must be weighed against any potential anti-sprawl benefits LEMs may have
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