Rational housing demand bubble

Publication date

2024-03-26T15:59:25Z

2024-06-05T05:10:14Z

2024

2024-03-26T15:59:30Z

Abstract

We provide a unified framework with demand for housing over the life cycle and financial frictions to analyze the existence and macroeconomic effects of rational housing bubbles. We distinguish a housing price bubble, defined as the difference between the housing market price and its fundamental value, from a housing demand bubble, which corresponds to a situation where a pure speculative housing demand exists. In an overlapping generation exchange economy, we show that no housing price bubble occurs. However, a housing demand bubble may occur, generating a boom in housing prices and a drop in the interest rate, when households face a binding borrowing constraint. The multiplicity of steady states and endogenous fluctuations can occur when credit market imperfections are moderate. These fluctuations involve transitions between equilibria with and without a housing demand bubble that generate large fluctuations in housing prices consistent with observed patterns. We finally extend the basic framework to a production economy and we show that a housing demand bubble increases housing prices, which can still be characterized by large fluctuations.

Document Type

Article


Accepted version

Language

English

Publisher

Springer Verlag

Related items

Versió postprint del document publicat a: https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00199-023-01501-4

Economic Theory, 2024, vol. 77, p. 699–746

https://doi.org/10.1007/s00199-023-01501-4

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(c) Springer Verlag, 2024

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