Housing Mobility

Sanbonmatsu L, Marvokov J, Porter N, Yang F, Adam E, Congdon WJ, Duncan GJ, Gennetian LA, Katz LF, Kling JR. The Long-Term Effects of Moving to Opportunity on Adult Health and Economic Self-Sufficiency. Cityscape [Internet]. 2012;14(2):109-36. WebsiteAbstract
Adults living in high-poverty neighborhoods often fare worse than adults in more advantaged neighborhoods on their physical health, mental health, and economic well-being. Although social scientists have observed this association for hundreds of years, they have found it difficult to determine the extent to which the neighborhoods themselves affect well-being versus the extent to which people at greater risk for adverse outcomes live in impoverished neighborhoods. In this article, we examine neighborhood effects using data from the 10- to 15-year evaluation of the Moving to Opportunity (MTO) for Fair Housing demonstration, which offered randomly selected families a housing voucher. The experimental design of MTO allows us to isolate the effects of neighborhoods from selection bias. We find that, 10 to 15 years after enrolling participants, the program had very few detectable effects on economic well-being but had some substantial effects on the physical and mental health of adults. For adults whose families received the offer of a housing voucher that could be used to move only to a low-poverty neighborhood, we find health benefits in terms of lower prevalence of diabetes, extreme obesity, physical limitations, and psychological distress. For adults offered a Section 8 voucher, we find benefits in terms of less extreme obesity and lower prevalence of lifetime depression.
Kling JR, Liebman JB, Katz LF. Experimental Analysis of Neighborhood Effects. Econometrica . 2007;75(1):83-119.Abstract
Families, primarily female-headed minority households with children, living in high poverty public housing projects in five U.S. cities were offered housing vouchers by lottery in the Moving to Opportunity program. Four to seven years after random assignment,families offered vouchers lived in safer neighborhoods that had lower poverty rates than those of the control group not offered vouchers.We find no significant overall effects of this intervention on adult economic self-sufficiency or physical health.Mental health benefits of the voucher offers for adults and for female youth were substantial.Beneficial effects for female youth on education, risky behavior, and physical health were offset by adverse effects for male youth. For outcomes that exhibit significant treatment effects, we find, using variation in treatment intensity across voucher types and cities, that the relationship between neighborhood poverty rate and outcomes is approximately linear.