| Working Paper
95-11
by Gary V. Engelhardt and Christopher J. Mayer
This paper examines the effects of intergenerational
transfers on saving behavior by examining private wealth
transfers targeted toward first-time home purchases.
The study of transfer behavior in the housing market
is advantageous for a number of reasons: the down payment
requirement associated with home purchase can be thought
of as an important, well-defined borrowing constraint
that most U.S. households face; private wealth transfers
targeted to home purchases are significant; and home
equity is a highly important component of household
wealth in the United States. The empirical analysis
shows that transfer recipients have a saving rate that
is lower than that of non-recipients by as much as 6
percentage points, representing a reduction of 39 to
49 percent in the household saving rate. In addition,
households that receive transfers reduce the time required
to save for the down payment by 22 percent. For each
dollar of transfer received, households increase the
dollar amount of the down payment by about 85 cents,
allowing them to achieve a higher down payment threshold.
Households also increase the value of the home purchased
upon receiving a transfer, but by an amount that is
much lower than would be possible if the transfer were
fully leveraged. The amount of the transfer appears
to be targeted to help households achieve certain down
payment thresholds that give favorable terms on mortgages.
Although the evidence suggests that the availability
of a transfer reduces household savings, we cannot reject
the alternative hypothesis that transfer recipients
are inherently low savers.
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