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We approach the literature on housing and inequality from two angles. One is the impact of unequal endowments on housing. The second is the “memberships” inequality associated with neighborhoods, namely, households’ location in a geographic
and social context. We elaborate on these two angles of inequality and focus on three distinctive features of housing: consumption, capital and location. For owner-occupants, capital and consumption are bundled together in a single good. For both renters and owner-occupants, housing consumption inequality, access to good neighborhoods, and housing wealth follow from unequal endowments. Housing can propagate inequality by enabling owner-occupants to use it as collateral
for other investments, or secure higher returns to human capital investments through the better schools in better neighborhoods. We use this approach to analyse key aspects of housing and inequality, paying special attention to the impacts
of racial discrimination and segregation.