International Housing Returns and the Financial Crisis: Disentangling Credit Supply and Demand Shocks

58 Pages Posted: 26 Jan 2018 Last revised: 31 Jan 2018

See all articles by Randall Campbell

Randall Campbell

Mississippi State University - Department of Finance and Economics

Kenneth Roskelley

Mississippi State University - Department of Finance & Economics

Date Written: January 25, 2018

Abstract

We investigate three popular supply-side explanations for the run-up in international housing prices prior to the financial crisis: loose monetary policy, a global savings glut, and deteriorating credit standards. Unlike prior studies, we use both central bank surveys and economic data to identify credit demand and credit supply shocks related to monetary policy, current account deficits, and changing credit standards. Using an unbalanced panel of 57 countries from 1990-2014, we find that none of the three explanations provides an adequate description of global housing prices, particularly prior to the financial crisis. Monetary policy does not explain the observed housing returns, and in fact tight monetary policy is correlated to higher housing returns. Current account deficits, on the other hand, are correlated with higher housing prices, but part of this correlation simply reflects that higher housing demand, and thus higher credit demand, results in larger current account deficits. Finally, we find that changing credit standards are capable of explaining some portion of housing returns, but that these changes can also proxy for demand shocks.

Suggested Citation

Campbell, Randall and Roskelley, Kenneth, International Housing Returns and the Financial Crisis: Disentangling Credit Supply and Demand Shocks (January 25, 2018). Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3110280 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3110280

Randall Campbell

Mississippi State University - Department of Finance and Economics ( email )

Mississippi State, MS 39762
United States

Kenneth Roskelley (Contact Author)

Mississippi State University - Department of Finance & Economics ( email )

Mississippi State, MS 39762
United States
662-325-1979 (Phone)

Do you have negative results from your research you’d like to share?

Paper statistics

Downloads
94
Abstract Views
490
Rank
503,030
PlumX Metrics