House prices and credit constraints: making sense of the U.S. experience

Duca, J. V., Muellbauer, J. & Murphy, A. (2011). House prices and credit constraints: making sense of the U.S. experience. (SERC Discussion Papers SERCDP0077). Spatial Economics Research Centre (SERC), London School of Economics and Political Science.
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Most US house price models break down in the mid-2000's, due to the omission of exogenous changes in mortgage credit supply (associated with the sub-prime mortgage boom) from house price-to-rent ratio and inverted housing demand models. Previous models lack data on credit constraints facing first-time home-buyers. Incorporating a measure of credit conditions - the cyclically adjusted loan-to-value ratio for first time buyers – into house price to rent ratio models yields stable long-run relationships, more precisely estimated effects, reasonable speeds of adjustment and improved model fits.

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