Natural Disaster Risk and Residential Mortgage Lending Standards
Publication Date
1-1-2022
Document Type
Article
Publication Title
Journal of Real Estate Research
Volume
44
Issue
1
DOI
10.1080/08965803.2021.2013613
First Page
106
Last Page
130
Abstract
We study how bank residential mortgage lending standards are affected by risks to the local economy from natural disasters. We find that banks tighten lending standards in disaster-hit counties, suggesting that lenders are more cautious in these locations since environmental disasters can increase the long-term risks to the local economy. Tighter bank lending standards can lower access to mortgage credit and have negative consequences for the housing sector. On the other hand, we do not find any statistically significant change in the lending standards of banks that specialize in subprime loans. Finally, we show that banks tighten lending standards in those disaster-hit counties where there is a high belief about the negative effects of climate change; this indicates that disasters impact lending standards through increasing existing disaster risk awareness among lenders, whereas, lenders do not update their risk assessment in low belief counties.
Keywords
climate change, housing market, natural disasters, Residential lending standards
Department
Accounting and Finance
Recommended Citation
Jun Duanmu, Yongjia Li, Meimei Lin, and Salman Tahsin. "Natural Disaster Risk and Residential Mortgage Lending Standards" Journal of Real Estate Research (2022): 106-130. https://doi.org/10.1080/08965803.2021.2013613