Frondel, ManuelGerster, AndreasVance, Colin2016-04-262016-04-262016http://hdl.handle.net/2003/3491210.17877/DE290R-16960Many countries have introduced Energy Performance Certificates (EPCs) to mitigate information asymmetry problems with respect to the thermal quality of houses. Using big data on real estate advertisements that cover large parts of the German housing market, this paper empirically investigates the consequences of a shift from a voluntary to a mandatory quality disclosure regime on the offer prices of houses. Illustrated by a stylized theoretical model, we test the following key hypothesis: Prices for houses whose owners would not voluntarily disclose their house’s energy consumption in real estate advertisements should decrease upon a shift to a mandatory disclosure scheme. Employing an instrumental variable approach to cope with the endogeneity of disclosure decisions, our analysis demonstrates the relative advantage of mandatory over voluntary disclosure rules.enDiscussion Paper / SFB823;20, 2016information asymmetryenvironmental certificationmandatory disclosure310330620The power of mandatory quality disclosureEvidence from the German housing marketworking paperAsymmetrie der InformationOffenlegungspflichtEnergieausweis