Labor-Leisure Choice and Relative Income Concerns in the Shadow of the Housing Market

Journal of Economic Issues 52:3 (Sept. 2018) pages 869-890

26 Pages Posted: 26 Dec 2013 Last revised: 30 Aug 2018

Date Written: August 1, 2018

Abstract

We theoretically examine the connection among labor productivity, work time, and housing costs in an economy with households differing in wages and neighborhoods differing in quality. We argue that the location rent component of housing cost is key to explicating the connection. We trace how the housing market makes relative income instrumental for maximizing utility even if households’ utility functions are not interdependent. Over time, productivity growth yields higher wages but households compete some of that away on the housing market. This structural inflation of location rents counteracts preferences to work less as wages rise and hinders the expansion of leisure. Relative income effects are shown to arise as a consequence of a market institution that monetizes socially-imbued preferences.

Keywords: labor supply, leisure, housing, productivity, relative income

JEL Classification: J22, O40, R21, D11

Suggested Citation

Rtischev, Dimitry, Labor-Leisure Choice and Relative Income Concerns in the Shadow of the Housing Market (August 1, 2018). Journal of Economic Issues 52:3 (Sept. 2018) pages 869-890, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2371557 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2371557

Dimitry Rtischev (Contact Author)

Gakushuin University ( email )

1-5-1 Mejiro, Toshima-ku
Tokyo 171-8588
Japan

HOME PAGE: http://www.researchgate.net/profile/Dimitry_Rtischev

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