International capital flows and house prices: theory and evidence
The last fifteen years have been marked by a dramatic boom-bust cycle in real estate prices, accompanied by economically large fluctuations in international capital flows. We argue that changes in international capital flows played, at most, a small role in driving house price movements in this episode and that, instead, the key causal factor was a financial market liberalization and its subsequent reversal. Using observations on credit standards, capital flows, and interest rates, we find that a bank survey measure of credit supply, by itself, explains 53 percent of the quarterly variation in house price growth in the U.S. over the period 1992-2010, while it explains 66 percent over the period since 2000. By contrast, once we control for credit supply, various measures of capital flows, real interest rates, and aggregate activity-collectively-add less than 5% to the fraction of variation explained for these same movements in home values. Credit supply retains its strong marginal explanatory power for house price movements over the period 2002-2010 in a panel of international data, while capital flows have no explanatory power
| Item Type | Chapter |
|---|---|
| Keywords | housing boom and bust,global savings glut,foreign capital flows |
| Departments | Finance |
| Date Deposited | 16 Apr 2012 13:55 |
| URI | https://researchonline.lse.ac.uk/id/eprint/43128 |
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- http://www.nber.org/chapters/c12626 (Publisher)