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'We're just existing, not living!' Mortgage stress and the concealed costs of coping with crisis
Author(s)
Date Issued
2016-08-24
Date Available
2018-02-24T02:00:11Z
Abstract
Following the financial crisis, an extensive literature has examined the vulnerabilities facing mortgagors in default and foreclosure. However, in addition to these 'overt casualties' of the crash, many households are struggling to meet their mortgage payments by enduring severe cutbacks to their quality of life. The experiences of these 'unrevealed casualties' of the financial crisis and the coping strategies they employ to respond to mortgage stress remain under-explored. Drawing on survey data of Irish mortgagors (n = 433), this paper examines the impacts of mortgage stress upon quality of life and mortgagors' coping strategies to respond to their financial difficulties. The findings suggest that mortgage stress affects a broader range of households than previously considered; mortgage stressed households adopt a range of expenditure, employment, finance and housing-related responses; and more punitive responses correlate with greater mortgage stress levels, thereby providing a fuller account of the real cost of coping with the crisis impacts.
Sponsorship
Irish Research Council
Type of Material
Journal Article
Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Journal
Housing Studies
Volume
32
Issue
5
Start Page
584
End Page
612
Copyright (Published Version)
2016 Informa UK Limited
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
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Waldron_and_Redmond_2016_-_We¿re_just_existing_not_living_-_Mortgage_Stress_and_the_Concealed_Costs_of_Coping_with_Crisis.pdf
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1011.96 KB
Format
Adobe PDF
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