Daminger wrote his dissertation at the University of Regensburg under the supervision of Prof. Dr. Kristof Dascher. In three chapters, he analysed the spatial impact of homeownership subsidies. The central result of the thesis is that government subsidies for homeownership are simultaneously subsidies for decentralised housing and thus a driver of spatial suburbanisation.
Two chapters analyse the repeal of the German "Eigenheimzulage" in 2005. In the first step of his analysis, Daminger created own data sets on spatial population dynamics in German cities and regions based on administrative data from official statistics. Using various econometric difference-in-differences approaches, he subsequently showed that the repeal of the subsidy led to a recentralisation of the population both within cities and regions. Conversely, this result illustrates the decentralisation effect of the original subsidy.
Another chapter deals with the effects of homeownership subsidies on the spatial distribution of housing prices by evaluating the "Baukindergeld" introduced in 2018. Inner-city rental price indices of German cities, constructed from a large dataset of housing advertisements using hedonic regressions, serve as an innovative data basis. The econometric analysis shows that after the subsidy was introduced, rent growth slowed down in affordable cities, i.e., exactly where the Baukindergeld generated the largest incentive for becoming homeowners. The effect works through the realloaction of new homeowners: their move into ownership and thus change from the rental to the ownership segment weakens the demand for rental housing, while the supply of rental housing is inelastic, at least in the short run.
Research prices
The Federal Statistical Office (Destatis) awarded the "outstanding scientific work" on 17 November 2022. "The Eigenheimzulage is one of the most expensive subsidies in the history of Germany. The work of Alexander Daminger deals with a politically very relevant question about the effects of policies to promote owner-occupied housing," according to a Destatis press release. The Young Scientist Award "Statistical Science for the Society" promotes innovative data use and methodological research in scientific theses closely related to applied statistics.