Is there a national housing market bubble brewing in the United States?
Loading...
Date
Authors
Gupta, Rangan
Ma, Jun
Theodoridis, Konstantinos
Wohar, Mark
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Abstract
We use a time-varying parameter dynamic factor model with stochastic volatility estimated using Bayesian methods to disentangle the relative importance of the common component in Federal Housing Finance Agency house price movements from state-specific shocks, over the quarterly period of 1975Q2 to 2017Q4. We find that the contribution of the national factor in explaining fluctuations in house prices is critical. We then use a Bayesian change-point vector autoregressive model that allows for different regimes throughout the sample period, to study the impact of aggregate supply, aggregate demand, (conventional) monetary policy, and term-spread shocks, identified based on sign restrictions on the national component of house price movements. While monetary policy and other shocks are found to be quite dominant early on, we find evidence that the national factor has been detached from the identified macroeconomic shocks since 2014, thus suggesting that a “national bubble” might be brewing again in the US housing market.
Description
Keywords
House prices, Time-varying dynamic factor model, Change-point vector autoregressive model, Macroeconomic shocks, United States (US), SDG-08: Decent work and economic growth
Sustainable Development Goals
Citation
Gupta, R., Ma, J., Theodoridis, K., & Wohar, M. (2023). Is there a national housing market bubble brewing in the United States? Macroeconomic Dynamics. 2023;27(8):2191-2228. doi:10.1017/S1365100522000645.
