Municipal Home Value Guarantee Program
Critically evaluate the following program by identifying a significant, unintended negative consequence it might have on the physical condition of the neighborhood itself. Explain the economic reasoning behind this potential outcome.
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Economics
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Introduction to Microeconomics Course
The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
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Evaluation in Bloom's Taxonomy
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Municipal Home Value Guarantee Program
A city government, aiming to stabilize a neighborhood with falling property values, launches a program guaranteeing homeowners they can sell their property for no less than 90% of its assessed value at the start of the program. One year later, observers note that the physical condition of many homes in the neighborhood has visibly worsened. Which statement best analyzes this outcome?
Evaluating a Home Value Protection Policy
Homeowner Incentives and Price Guarantees
Homeowner Incentives and Price Guarantees
A homeowner who purchases an insurance policy that guarantees they can sell their house for at least its original purchase price will have a greater financial incentive to perform costly, non-essential maintenance (e.g., landscaping, exterior painting) compared to a homeowner without such a policy.
An insurance company offers a policy that guarantees homeowners can sell their house for at least its original purchase price. If this policy becomes widely adopted by homeowners throughout a particular neighborhood, what is the most probable long-term effect on the neighborhood's collective property values?
Designing a Better Home Insurance Policy
An insurance company designs a policy to protect homeowners against a drop in their property's value. The company is concerned that homeowners with this policy might neglect important maintenance, knowing they are protected from financial loss. This neglect could then contribute to a decline in the home's value. Which of the following policy adjustments would be the most effective at counteracting this tendency for homeowners to neglect maintenance?
A homeowner has an insurance policy that guarantees they can sell their house for at least its original purchase price. They discover two separate maintenance issues that cost the same to fix: a leaky roof causing interior water damage, and a faded exterior that needs repainting. Considering the financial incentives created by the insurance policy, which course of action is the homeowner most likely to choose?