George Masnick
George Masnick was a Senior Research Fellow at the Center, researching and writing about household and family demography, population dynamics, housing studies, and household forecasting. He co-authored The Nation's Families: 1960-1990, Regional Diversity: Growth in the United States, 1960-1990, and Housing in America: 1970-2000, and was a regular contributor to the Center's annual State of the Nation's Housing report. He authored a series of papers on household formation and homeownership trends in the United States with particular attention to immigrants and minorities. He taught at the University of Pennsylvania from 1970-1974 and at Harvard University from 1974-1987. He received his BA and MA in sociology from Cornell University and earned his doctorate in sociology/demography from Brown University.
By This Author
Article review- “Patriarchy, Power, and Pay: The Transformation of American Families, 1800-2015”
Variable Population Growth is Driving an Uneven Housing Recovery in the Nation’s Large Metropolitan Areas
For Housing Demographers It’s All About the Data – But Sometimes the Data Come Up Woefully Short
The Rise of the Single-Person Household
What Will Happen to Housing When the Baby Boomers are Gone?
The Impact of Minority Growth and Minorities’ Rising Household Income on Housing Markets
Emerging Cohort Trends in Housing Debt and Home Equity
The Impact of New Census Bureau Interim National Population Projections on Projected Household Growth in the United States
The New Demographics of Housing
Second Homes: What, How Many, Where and Who
Home Ownership Trends and Racial Inequality In the United States in the 20th Century
Millennial Housing Issues in Perspective: Visualizing Cohort Trends in Population Size, Household Numbers, Ownership and Renting
Article review- “Patriarchy, Power, and Pay: The Transformation of American Families, 1800-2015”
Variable Population Growth is Driving an Uneven Housing Recovery in the Nation’s Large Metropolitan Areas
For Housing Demographers It’s All About the Data – But Sometimes the Data Come Up Woefully Short