Tuesday, March 1, 2022
From the New York Times:
“A new study compares the costs of renting versus buying a three-bedroom home in 39 countries across the globe.”
From the New York Times:
“A new study compares the costs of renting versus buying a three-bedroom home in 39 countries across the globe.”
Posted by 3:50 PM
atLabels: Global Housing Watch
Monday, February 28, 2022
From a new NBER working paper by Marijn A. Bolhuis, Judd N. L. Cramer & Lawrence H. Summers:
“We study how the recent run-up in housing and rental prices affects the outlook for inflation in the United States. Housing held down overall inflation in 2021. Despite record growth in private market-based measures of home prices and rents, government measured residential services inflation was only four percent for the twelve months ending in January 2022. After explaining the mechanical cause for this divergence, we estimate that, if past relationships hold, the residential inflation components of the CPI and PCE are likely to move close to seven percent during 2022. These findings imply that housing will make a significant contribution to overall inflation in 2022, ranging from one percentage point for headline PCE to 2.6 percentage points for core CPI. We expect residential inflation to remain elevated in 2023.”
From a new NBER working paper by Marijn A. Bolhuis, Judd N. L. Cramer & Lawrence H. Summers:
“We study how the recent run-up in housing and rental prices affects the outlook for inflation in the United States. Housing held down overall inflation in 2021. Despite record growth in private market-based measures of home prices and rents, government measured residential services inflation was only four percent for the twelve months ending in January 2022.
Posted by 6:42 AM
atLabels: Global Housing Watch
Saturday, February 26, 2022
In conversation with Bill Gale, Arjay and Frances Miller Chair in Federal Economic Policy and senior fellow at the Economic Studies Program, Brookings Institution…
In this episode of Econofact’s podcast, Gill discusses the impact of inequitable racial impacts of government policy. Some notable points include the following:
Click here to listen to the full podcast.
In conversation with Bill Gale, Arjay and Frances Miller Chair in Federal Economic Policy and senior fellow at the Economic Studies Program, Brookings Institution…
In this episode of Econofact’s podcast, Gill discusses the impact of inequitable racial impacts of government policy. Some notable points include the following:
Posted by 9:05 AM
atLabels: Inclusive Growth
Friday, February 25, 2022
On cross-country:
On the US:
On China
On other countries:
On cross-country:
On the US:
Posted by 5:00 AM
atLabels: Global Housing Watch
Thursday, February 24, 2022
From the IMF’s latest report on Poland:
“The authorities’ proposals to increase housing affordability should consider the impact on the housing market and financial stability. The housing market has returned to pre-pandemic robust conditions (Figure 14). The state development bank plans to offer partial mortgage guarantees in lieu of mortgage down payments to support applicants for smaller mortgage loans, which could increase demand for mortgage loans and fuel further price growth. Mortgages are mostly floating rate, boosting housing affordability during the recent time of extraordinarily low interest rates. However, households could become overstretched as interest rates normalize, risking a deterioration in credit quality. To mitigate these risks, it is important that banks continue conservative creditworthiness assessments in line with supervisory guidelines, including an LTV limit at 80 percent, stressed DSTI at 40–50 percent with an interest rate buffer of 250–300 bps, and loan maturities capped at 25 years. Early signals suggest increasing policy interest rates are likely to dampen demand for mortgage credit.”
From the IMF’s latest report on Poland:
“The authorities’ proposals to increase housing affordability should consider the impact on the housing market and financial stability. The housing market has returned to pre-pandemic robust conditions (Figure 14). The state development bank plans to offer partial mortgage guarantees in lieu of mortgage down payments to support applicants for smaller mortgage loans, which could increase demand for mortgage loans and fuel further price growth.
Posted by 6:44 AM
atLabels: Global Housing Watch
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