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?
Cohort Insights into the Influence of Education, Race and Family Structure on Homeownership Trends by Age: 1985 to 1995
Updating and Extending the Joint Center Household Projections
A Critical Look at Rising Homeownership Rates
Understanding the Minority Contribution to U.S. Owner Household Growth
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