Inclusive Growth

Global Housing Watch

Forecasting Forum

Energy & Climate Change

Monetary Policy and Inequality: Distributional Effects of Asset Purchase Programs

From a paper by İrfan Çerçil, and Gorkem Aksaray:

“Income and wealth inequality have been steadily rising in developed countries since the 1970s. Unconventional monetary policy has recently come under increasing scrutiny for its role in exacerbating this trend. In response to the 2008 global financial crisis, central banks in many developed countries have started to engage in large-scale asset purchase programs (APPs), also known as quantitative easing (QE), to stimulate their economies. This paper investigates how these policies have influenced inequality. Using panel data from 49 countries between 1999 and 2019, we apply Jordà’s (2005) local projections (LP) method to estimate the average treatment effect (ATE) of APPs on income and wealth inequality. To deal with endogeneity, we use propensity scores and the augmented inverse probability weighting (AIPW) estimator. Our results reveal a discernible relationship between APPs and increased inequality. Specifically, we find that while the impact of APPs on income inequality fades over time, their effect on wealth inequality are more pronounced and persistent. Our research contributes to the ongoing debate about the distributional consequences of unconventional monetary policy and offers practical insights for policymakers.”

From a paper by İrfan Çerçil, and Gorkem Aksaray:

“Income and wealth inequality have been steadily rising in developed countries since the 1970s. Unconventional monetary policy has recently come under increasing scrutiny for its role in exacerbating this trend. In response to the 2008 global financial crisis, central banks in many developed countries have started to engage in large-scale asset purchase programs (APPs), also known as quantitative easing (QE), to stimulate their economies.

Read the full article…

Posted by at 8:27 AM

Labels: Inclusive Growth

Global Housing Watch

On cross-country:

  • 2025 Global Housing and Mortgage Outlook Mid-Year Update – Fitch
  • A broken housing market is driving inequality right across Europe – and fuelling the far right. From Lisbon to Amsterdam, housing policy has led to haves and have-nots. But, as our new series uncovers, it doesn’t have to be this way – The Guardian


Working papers and conferences:

  • Mortgage Market Structure and the Transmission of Monetary Policy During the Great Inflation – VoxEU
  • Central Bank Communication and House Price Expectations SSRN
  • Housing Market Spillovers in China via Trading Volume: A Comparison of Two Spillover Indexes – SSRN
  • Chinese Housing Market Sentiment Index: A Generative Ai Approach – SSRN 
  • Residential real estate (RRE) lending standards: determinants and financial stability implications – ECB


On China:

  • China rolls out official ‘property supermarkets’ to prop up creaking housing market. Proponents say these property hubs make transactions more centralised and trustworthy as they are vetted by local governments – South China Morning Post


On other countries:  

  • [Canada] Home construction must double over next decade to restore 2019 affordability: CMHC – Bloomberg
  • [Canada] Housing shortages in Canada – CMHC
  • [Canada] Updating Canada’s housing supply shortages: new housing supply gap estimates – CMHC
  • [Canada] CMHC gives up on comparing housing affordability to 2004 levels – Globe and Mail  
  • [Canada] Doubling Home Construction Will Barely Improve Affordability in Canada: CMHC – Bloomberg
  • [Canada] Canada home prices to decline 2% as trade war hits homebuyer confidence – Reuters
  • [France] French Housing Loans Recovery Underway but Remains Fragile – Fitch Ratings
  • [Hong Kong] Despite property market slump, Hong Kong must increase housing supply. Government should not repeat post-1997 mistake of shelving plans to increase long-term housing supply because of a temporary market dip – South China Morning Post
  • [Hong Kong] The Hong Kong property developer rushing to refinance billions of dollars in loans. New World’s negotiations with banks come after years of ambitious debt-fuelled expansion – FT
  • [Portugal] Foreigners pay twice as much as locals to buy Portugal homes – Bloomberg
  • [South Korea] South Korea to Announce Measures to Cool House Prices, Yonhap – Bloomberg
  • [Spain] La crisis de la vivienda también impacta en el empleo: reducir un 30% el precio crearía 410.000 trabajos. La rebaja inyectaría en la economía 25.000 millones de euros en cinco años, ya que las familias podrían consumir más, según un informe de CC OO – El Pais
  • [United Kingdom] UK ministers urged to ‘get on’ with stronger homebuyer protections. Consumer group warns people have more rights buying a toaster than a new house – FT
  • [United Kingdom] Interest-only mortgage could make comeback as regulator revisits rules. Financial Conduct Authority looks at whether the product it once called a ‘ticking timebomb’ can support home ownership – The Guardian

On cross-country:

  • 2025 Global Housing and Mortgage Outlook Mid-Year Update – Fitch
  • A broken housing market is driving inequality right across Europe – and fuelling the far right. From Lisbon to Amsterdam, housing policy has led to haves and have-nots. But, as our new series uncovers, it doesn’t have to be this way – The Guardian

Working papers and conferences:

  • Mortgage Market Structure and the Transmission of Monetary Policy During the Great Inflation – VoxEU
  • Central Bank Communication and House Price Expectations SSRN
  • Housing Market Spillovers in China via Trading Volume: A Comparison of Two Spillover Indexes – SSRN
  • Chinese Housing Market Sentiment Index: A Generative Ai Approach – SSRN 
  • Residential real estate (RRE) lending standards: determinants and financial stability implications – ECB

On China:

  • China rolls out official ‘property supermarkets’ to prop up creaking housing market.

Read the full article…

Posted by at 5:00 AM

Labels: Global Housing Watch

Austerity: How Politics Pulled Away Our Safety Net

From a book chapter by Ted Schrecker and Clare Bambra:

“‘Austerity is the calling card of neoliberalism’, wrote Lancet editor Richard Horton in 2017. We describe the austerity of US welfare ‘reforms’ of the 1990s and then identify the 2007–2008 financial crisis as the window of opportunity for austerity in Europe. In the UK, we focus specifically on effects on the health effects on low-income households, local government services, and the National Health Service—all negative, sometimes disastrously so. Both in the UK and in the US, impacts fell disproportionately on the poorest and most vulnerable people and regions. Effects on poverty and its sequelae were especially severe. Predictably, health inequalities in the UK increased. We conclude with a provocative description of austerity as a large-scale human experiment, analogous to the structural adjustment programmes that were used to promote neoliberalism starting in the 1980s, and with one scholar’s description of austerity in the UK as a human rights violation.”

From a book chapter by Ted Schrecker and Clare Bambra:

“‘Austerity is the calling card of neoliberalism’, wrote Lancet editor Richard Horton in 2017. We describe the austerity of US welfare ‘reforms’ of the 1990s and then identify the 2007–2008 financial crisis as the window of opportunity for austerity in Europe. In the UK, we focus specifically on effects on the health effects on low-income households, local government services,

Read the full article…

Posted by at 9:33 AM

Labels: Inclusive Growth

The ‘inequality machine’

From a book chapter by Ted Schrecker and Clare Bambra:

“‘The inequality machine is reshaping the planet’, wrote the editor of Le Monde Diplomatique in 2013. Rising inequality of income and wealth is one of the distinguishing characteristics of the neoliberal era; we provide descriptions first on a global scale and then on the national, noting the role of labour market transformations and the financial crisis. Poverty is a manifestation of inequality with especially negative consequences for health; we examine trends in the UK and the US, and contrast them with the simultaneous increases in wealth accumulation. We then provide three more focussed case examples: spatial inequalities in health in England; incarceration in the US; and unequal distribution of risks and benefits from the activities that generate climate change. We conclude with a review of evidence that economic inequality makes life worse for almost everyone in the societies affected, not just those at its sharp end.”

From a book chapter by Ted Schrecker and Clare Bambra:

“‘The inequality machine is reshaping the planet’, wrote the editor of Le Monde Diplomatique in 2013. Rising inequality of income and wealth is one of the distinguishing characteristics of the neoliberal era; we provide descriptions first on a global scale and then on the national, noting the role of labour market transformations and the financial crisis. Poverty is a manifestation of inequality with especially negative consequences for health;

Read the full article…

Posted by at 9:32 AM

Labels: Inclusive Growth

The debate on growth versus environment at the urban scale

From a paper by Charlotte Liotta and Jeroen van den Bergh:

“The long-standing growth-versus-environment debate has centered on national and global scales, devoting little attention to cities despite steadily increasing urban concentrations of population, activities and emissions. This Perspective clarifies how this debate plays out for cities by relating four urban growth dimensions—economic, population, spatial and environmental—to the narratives of green growth, degrowth and post-growth. To this end, we review theoretical and empirical insights about links between growth dimensions. Specific issues addressed include horizontal spillovers among cities, vertical policy integration and local experiments. Thus we connect the abstract growth-versus-environment debate to evidence regarding urban environmental policy.”

From a paper by Charlotte Liotta and Jeroen van den Bergh:

“The long-standing growth-versus-environment debate has centered on national and global scales, devoting little attention to cities despite steadily increasing urban concentrations of population, activities and emissions. This Perspective clarifies how this debate plays out for cities by relating four urban growth dimensions—economic, population, spatial and environmental—to the narratives of green growth, degrowth and post-growth. To this end, we review theoretical and empirical insights about links between growth dimensions.

Read the full article…

Posted by at 9:30 AM

Labels: Energy & Climate Change

Home Older Posts

Subscribe to: Posts