Affiliation:
1. University of Texas at Austin and NBER (email: )
2. Harvard University and NBER (email: )
3. Johns Hopkins University (email: )
4. Massachusetts Institute of Technology and NBER (email: )
Abstract
Low-income families often live in low-upward-mobility neighborhoods. We study why by using a randomized trial with housing voucher recipients that provided information, financial support, and customized search assistance to move to high-opportunity neighborhoods. The treatment increased the fraction moving to high-upward-mobility areas from 15 to 53 percent. A second trial reveals this treatment effect is driven primarily by customized search assistance. Qualitative interviews show that the intervention relaxed bandwidth constraints and addressed family-specific needs. Our findings imply many low-income families do not have strong preferences to stay in low-opportunity areas and that barriers in housing search significantly increase residential segregation by income. (JEL D83, G51, R21, R23, R31, R38)
Publisher
American Economic Association
Cited by
5 articles.
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