Three California professors conducted a study on how home ownership benefits of children. Working under the Research Institute for Housing America, an independent arm of the Mortgage Bankers Association, they found that the homeowners’ children stay in school longer and face a lower risk of teen pregnancy than renters’ children.
The study did not offer a reason why homeownership helps children, but one author has an opinion:
“Does buying a home make you a better person?” asks Richard K. Green, director of the University of Southern California’s Lusk Center for Real Estate. “No, but the discipline associated with saving for even a small downpayment and subsequently managing a house is, on average, associated with the discipline needed to promote better outcomes for children.”
To focus on the value of homeownership, the study attempted to back other influences out of the equation, such as the education level of parents or their marital status, income, race and age. Their goal was to look specifically at homeownership’s influence on a child’s development.
Major findings
• Children who live in owner-occupied homes have higher graduation
rates. The dropout rate was 2.6 percent lower than renters’ children.
• The teen birth rate for homeowners’ children was 5 percent less than renters.
• The length of homeownership seemed unimportant. Some critics suggested
that it wasn’t homeownership per se that influenced children, but
instead, the length of time a family lives in a neighborhood. However,
the study suggests that even relatively recent homebuyers’ kids had the
same benefits as long-time owners.
• The size of the parent’s home downpayment made little difference, even
if it was relatively low. All children benefited when their parents
owned the home. However, the authors noted one exception: Parents who
bought a home with no downpayment saw no advantage.
• For both renters and homeowners, a parent’s education level was a strong predictor of their child’s success.
• Buying a home has the strongest benefit for children 12 to 17 years
old. While a home purchase helps younger children, the study found that
it had the greatest benefit around the teen years.
© 2012 Florida Realtors®
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