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Manchester Grand Hyatt, Regatta C
Hosted By:
American Real Estate and Urban Economics Association
Housing and Cyclical Dynamics
Paper Session
Sunday, Jan. 5, 2020 1:00 PM - 3:00 PM (PDT)
- Chair: Lu Han, University of Toronto
Do Housing Markets Affect Local Consumer Prices? - Evidence from United States Cities
Abstract
Using city-level retail price data for a bundle of consumer products in the U.S., we find that changes in house price exert an important causal/leading influence on local consumer prices, but not vice versa. On average a 10% increase in house prices is associated with a 4.6% increase in consumer prices over the past three decades. Moreover, there is considerable heterogeneity in the transmission across locations and across products. The interplay between housing supply constraints and productivity gap across cities is the key to the geographical heterogeneity. Whereas housing demand shocks have a stronger impact on local consumer prices in the cities with higher concentration of college graduates, the impact of housing supply shocks is stronger in the cities with more stringent regulations on housing supply. At the product level, housing demand shocks are transmitted primarily through flexibly-priced products, while the pass-through of housing supply shock to CPs is significant in the products that are produced locally. Our results suggest that markup effect is at work in the pass-through of housing demand shock (rather than conventional channels of wealth effect or collateral effect), while local cost effect is at work in the pass-through of housing supply shock.Unemployment and the United States Housing Market during the Great Recession
Abstract
This paper studies the recent U.S. housing bust in a quantitative lifecycle model using panel data from the Survey of Consumer Finances. The model features an income process that is consistent with the large and long-lasting impact of unemployment on future earnings documented in recent empirical work. It also features exogenous moving shocks consistent with survey evidence which shows that many households move for reasons unrelated to their financial situation. In addition to endogenous moves, the exogenous moving shocks help match the distribution of movers in the data: they are younger, have lower wealth, and less secure jobs -- that makes movers more sensitive to credit and labor market conditions. As a result, moving shocks amplify the quantitative importance of unemployment and credit shocks in the recent bust and help the model match the observed decline in house prices. A mortgage subsidy (HAMP) helps stabilize prices and reduce foreclosures even if the information about it is limited and only a small fraction of households is eligible.The Propagation of Demand Shocks Through Housing Markets
Abstract
The presence of incumbent homeowners creates a friction in housing markets, as incumbents wait to match with a buyer for their current home before buying their next home. As a result, demand stimulus can produce a multiplier effect by freeing up owners attempting to sell their current home, allowing them to re-enter the market as buyers. Exploiting a shock to housing demand caused by the 2015 surprise cut in Federal Housing Administration mortgage insurance premiums, we find that homeowners buy their next home sooner when the probability of their current home selling increases. This effect is especially pronounced in cold housing markets, in which homes take a long time to sell. We build and calibrate a model of the joint buyer-seller decision that explains these findings as a result of homeowners avoiding the cost of owning two homes simultaneously. Simulations of the model demonstrate that stimulus to home buying generates a substantial multiplier effect, particularly in cold housing markets.Discussant(s)
Edward Kung
,
University of California-Los Angeles
Liang Peng
,
Pennsylvania State University
Jack Favilukis
,
University of British Columbia
Eric Smith
,
University of Essex
JEL Classifications
- R2 - Household Analysis
- E2 - Consumption, Saving, Production, Investment, Labor Markets, and Informal Economy