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Working Paper

Who Pays for Higher Energy Costs? Distributional Effects in the Housing Market

Kiel Working Papers, 2297

Authors

  • Amaral
  • F.
  • Zetzmann
  • S.

Publication Date

JEL Classification

R31 Q41 Q54 D31

Key Words

Housing Markets

Energy Prices

Climate Change

Inequality

Related Topics

Real Estate Market

Climate

We examine how rising energy costs affect rental housing markets and inequality. Using listing data for the 30 largest German cities from 2015–2024, we find that higher energy prices are passed through to net rents in high-rent segments, where inefficient properties see significant rent reductions, but not in lower-priced segments. This asymmetry reflects tighter markets and lower demand elasticity in the affordable segment. Consequently, low-income households face much larger increases in total housing costs. Our results show how segmented housing markets can amplify inequality when energy prices rise, highlighting important distributional implications for climate policy.

Kiel Institute Experts

  • Francisco Amaral
    Kiel Institute Fellow
  • Steffen Zetzmann
    Kiel Institute Researcher

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