Abstract
The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017 (TCJA) reduced the incentive for households to claim itemized deductions that subsidize homeownership and simultaneously lowered income tax rates. We use an equilibrium model to quantify the effects of the TCJA on house prices, homeownership, and welfare. The reform removes the tax subsidy to owner-occupied housing for most households, who now choose to claim the standard deduction. However, over-consumption of tax subsidized housing by the remaining wealthy itemizers persists. Wealthy households benefit the most from this large tax cut, so the TCJA is a regressive policy that increases welfare inequality.
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