Authors
Ronan C. Lyons, Allison Shertzer, Rowena Gray, David N. Agorastos
- Acknowledgements & Disclosure
- The authors gratefully acknowledge the financial support of the National Science Foundation (SES-1918554), the Lincoln Institute of Land Policy, and Trinity College Dublin. Many excellent postdoctoral, graduate, undergraduate and professional research assistants contributed to this project; see Appendix A for complete acknowledgements. We thank seminar audiences at Trinity College Dublin, Bonn, UIUC, UC Davis, UC Irvine, Caltech, NBER (DAE), NYU, Paris School of Economics, Philadelphia Fed, Stanford (Cities, Housing, and Society Workshop), Wharton, Wisconsin, and Yale. We benefited from conversations with Morris Davis, Rebecca Diamond, Gilles Duranton, Barry Eichengreen, Fernando Ferreira, Daniel Fetter, Price Fishback, Ed Glaeser, Adam Guren, Jessie Handbury, Walker Hanlon, Philip Lane, Jeffrey Lin, Bob Margo, Tim McQuade, Thomas Piketty, Jonathan Rose, Moritz Schularick, Bryan Stuart, Alan Taylor, James Vickery, and Maisy Wong. The views expressed herein are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Bureau of Economic Research.
- DOI
- https://doi.org/10.3386/w32593
- Published in
- United States of America
Table of Contents
- Introduction 3
- Existing Twentieth Century Housing Price Series 7
- HHP Newspaper Data 10
- Price Index Construction and Comparisons to Existing Series 14
- Housing and the Business Cycle 23
- The Return to Owning Housing in the United States 27
- Nominal Rental Prices and the CPI 36
- Why Did Housing Price Trajectories Vary Across Cities? 41
- Conclusion 45
- Acknowledgements 49
- Data 50
- Geocoding 60
- Supplemental Results 62