Mortgage Borrowing and Chronic Disease Outcomes in Older Age: Evidence From Biomarker Data in the Health and Retirement Study

Author:

Rhodes Alec1ORCID,Moulton Stephanie2ORCID,Loibl Cäzilia3ORCID,Haurin Donald4ORCID,Joseph Joshua5ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute for Research on Poverty, University of Wisconsin–Madison , Madison, Wisconsin , USA

2. John Glenn College of Public Affairs, The Ohio State University , Columbus, Ohio , USA

3. Department of Human Sciences, The Ohio State University , Columbus, Ohio , USA

4. Department of Economics, The Ohio State University , Columbus, Ohio , USA

5. College of Medicine, The Ohio State University , Columbus, Ohio , USA

Abstract

Abstract Objectives The medical diagnosis of a disease is common in older age and can carry significant financial costs. For many older adults, equity in a home is their primary component of wealth; however, housing wealth is illiquid. We analyze the relationship between the liquidation of housing wealth through mortgage borrowing on older homeowners’ ability to successfully control a disease. Methods We use data on homeowners aged 65 and older from the 1998–2016 waves of the Health and Retirement Study (N = 3,457). We use biomarkers and physical health indicators to measure disease control following a medical diagnosis of diabetes, heart condition, high blood pressure, lung disease, or cancer. Random effects linear probability and instrumental variable regressions estimate the associations of housing wealth, new mortgage borrowing, and disease control. Results Descriptively, 28% of older homeowners who borrow against home equity are not controlled on their disease, compared to 33% of non-borrowers. Panel data instrumental variable regressions show that each $10,000 borrowed from home equity after diagnosis is associated with a 17-percentage-point reduction in the probability of the disease not being controlled. Discussion Many older adults are not able or willing to liquidate housing wealth, and the ability to borrow also depends on changes in home values. Thus, housing wealth is not a uniform social determinant of health but is shaped by older adults’ participation in financial markets.

Funder

U.S. Social Security Administration

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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