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Journal ArticleDOI

The Impact of Single-family Mortgage Foreclosures on Neighborhood Crime

Dan Immergluck, +1 more
- 23 Nov 2006 - 
- Vol. 21, Iss: 6, pp 851-866
TLDR
In this article, the authors examined the impact of foreclosures of single-family mortgages on levels of violent and property crime at the neighborhood level and found that higher foreclosure levels do contribute to higher levels of crime.
Abstract
Foreclosures of single-family mortgages have increased dramatically in many parts of the US in recent years. Much of this has been tied to the rise of higher-risk subprime mortgage lending. Debates concerning mortgage regulation, as well as around other residential finance policies and practices, hinge critically on the social as well as personal costs of loan default and foreclosure. This paper examines the impact of foreclosures of single-family mortgages on levels of violent and property crime at the neighborhood level. Using data on foreclosures, neighborhood characteristics, and crime, the study found that higher foreclosure levels do contribute to higher levels of violent crime. The results for property crime are not statistically significant. A standard deviation increase in the foreclosure rate (about 2.8 foreclosures for every 100 owner-occupied properties in one year) corresponds to an increase in neighborhood violent crime of approximately 6.7 per cent. The policy implications of these findings...

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Posted Content

Forced Sales and House Prices

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used data on house transactions in the state of Massachusetts over the last 20 years to show that houses sold after foreclosure, or close in time to the death or bankruptcy of at least one seller, are sold at lower prices than other houses.
Journal ArticleDOI

Forced Sales and House Prices

TL;DR: The market for housing differs in several important ways from the textbook model of a liquid asset market with exogenous fundamentals as mentioned in this paper, which implies that the price at which a house is sold can be influenced not only by general supply and demand conditions, but also by idiosyncratic factors, including the urgency of the sale and the effects of ownership transfer on the physical quality of the house.
Journal ArticleDOI

The external costs of foreclosure: The impact of single‐family mortgage foreclosures on property values

TL;DR: In this paper, the impact of foreclosures on nearby property values was measured by using a database that combines data on 1997 and 1998 single-family loans with data on neighborhood characteristics and more than 9,600 single family property transactions in Chicago in 1999.
Journal ArticleDOI

Neighborhood Effects of Concentrated Mortgage Foreclosures

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used a unique dataset on property sales and foreclosure filings in New York City from 2000 to 2005 to identify the effects of foreclosure starts on housing prices in the surrounding neighborhood.
Journal ArticleDOI

Subprime Outcomes: Risky Mortgages, Homeownership Experiences, and Foreclosures

TL;DR: This paper analyzed homeownership experiences in Massachusetts over the 1989-2007 period using a competing risks, proportional hazard framework, and found that homeownerships that begin with a subprime purchase mortgage end up in foreclosure almost 20 percent of the time, or more than 6 times as often as experiences that start with prime purchase mortgages.
References
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Book

The Death and Life of Great American Cities

Jane Jacobs
TL;DR: The conditions for city diversity, the generators of diversity, and the need for mixed primary uses are discussed in this paper, with a focus on the use of small blocks for small blocks.
Book

Econometric Models and Economic Forecasts

TL;DR: First course in Econometrics in Economics Departments at better schools, also Economic/Business Forecasting prerequisite but no calculus as mentioned in this paper, slightly higher level and more comprehensive than Gujarati.
Journal ArticleDOI

Systematic Social Observation of Public Spaces: A New Look at Disorder in Urban Neighborhoods

TL;DR: In this article, the sources and consequences of public disorder are assessed based on the videotaping and systematic rating of more than 23,000 street segments in Chicago, and highly reliable scales of social and physical disorder for 196 neighborhoods are constructed.
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