Do Homeowners Associations Mitigate or Aggravate Negative Spillovers from Neighboring Homeowner Distress?
Abstract
Experiences reveal that the monitoring costs of the foreclosure crisis may be non-trivial, and smaller governments may have more success at addressing potential negative externalities. One highly localized form of government is a homeowners’ association (HOA). HOAs could be well suited for triaging foreclosures, as they may detect delinquencies and looming defaults through direct observation or missed dues. On the other hand, the reliance on dues may leave HOAs particularly vulnerable to members’ foreclosure. We examine how property prices respond to homeowner distress and foreclosure within HOA communities in Florida. We combine datasets of HOAs, sales and aggregate loan delinquency and foreclosures from 2000 through 2008. We find properties in HOAs are relatively less impacted by more distressed neighbor homes compared to non-HOA properties, but only when considering less severe delinquency rates. We also find that negative price effects from higher delinquency exposure rates are ameliorated for properties in larger and newer HOAs.
Repository Citation
Cheung, Ron, Chris Cunningham, and Rachel Meltzer. June 2014. “Do Homeowners Associations Mitigate or Aggravate Negative Spillovers from Neighboring Homeowner Distress?” Journal of Housing Economics 24: 75-88.
Publisher
Elsevier
Publication Date
6-1-2014
Publication Title
Journal of Housing Economics
Department
Economics
Document Type
Article
DOI
https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jhe.2013.11.007
Keywords
Homeowners associations, Foreclosures, Delinquency, House prices
Language
English
Format
text