We estimate the effect of the UK real estate transfer tax on household mobility using
household level panel data. We exploit a discontinuity in the tax schedule as a quasiexperimental
setting which allows us to isolate the impact of the stamp duty from other
determinants of mobility. Our empirical strategy compares households with self-assessed
house values on either sides of a cut-off value where stamp duty liabilities jump sharply
while controlling for flexible but smooth functions of house values. We find that a higher
stamp duty negatively affects a household’s propensity to move and the expectation that a
move is imminent. Our results suggest that a GBp 5,000 increase in the stamp duty reduces
mobility by roughly 30 percent. We conclude that the UK stamp duty adversely affects the
functioning of housing- and labor markets.
Spatial Economics Seminar Amsterdam
- Speaker(s)
- Teemu Lyytikainen (Government Institute for Economic Research, Finland)
- Date
- 2012-03-05
- Location
- Amsterdam