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How do house prices affect subjective wellbeing in urban China? Mediating effects of subjective socioeconomic status and household consumption

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Abstract

Over the past two decades, house prices in Chinese large cities have increased rapidly and become progressively unaffordable for the majority of people. Although previous studies have explored the association between house prices and urban residents’ subjective wellbeing (SWB) in the Chinese context, the issue of whether the house price-SWB association varies with the number of residential properties is under-explored. Moreover, little effort has been made to unravel the mechanisms behind the relationship between house prices and SWB through subjective socioeconomic status and household consumption. Using three waves of data from the China Labour-Force Dynamic Survey, this study examines the effects and mechanisms through which house prices affect SWB. The results indicate that house prices exert a negative impact on SWB. These results are robust to instrumental variable (IV) analysis by using land supply per capita as the IV to address endogeneity. The results from moderation analysis show that the number of residential properties moderates the house price-SWB association. Additionally, the lowering of the subjective socioeconomic status and the shrinking expenditure on education and entertainment are two possible pathways through which the rise in house prices negatively affects SWB. Although people with residential properties tend to increase spending on education and entertainment as house prices rise, those with only one residential property experience a significant decline in their subjective socioeconomic status and consequently experience a decline in their SWB, thus demonstrating the moderating role of the number of residential properties in the mechanisms. Our findings identify an urgent need for intervention in the overheated real estate market and the concomitant social inequality.

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Notes

  1. Panel conditioning refers to the possibility that respondents who participated in the previous survey have changed their attitudes and behaviors in subsequent surveys. In other words, the response may be conditioned by whether respondents participated in the previous survey or not. The effect of panel conditioning may bias the response and decrease the data quality.

  2. Please refer to https://isg.sysu.edu.cn/node/353 and China Labor-force Dynamics Survey: Design and practice (Wang et al., 2017) for more information about the survey design, sampling strategy, and procedures of the CLDS.

  3. Considering that house prices exert little influence on older adults and people aged under 18 without eligibility for residential property purchase, the dataset was restricted to ages 18–65 years.

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Acknowledgements

This work was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China [42171196, 41971194, 41871140].

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Correspondence to Ye Liu.

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Pan, Z., Liu, Y., Wang, H. et al. How do house prices affect subjective wellbeing in urban China? Mediating effects of subjective socioeconomic status and household consumption. J Hous and the Built Environ 38, 2559–2580 (2023). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10901-023-10053-x

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10901-023-10053-x

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