Inclusive Growth

Global Housing Watch

Forecasting Forum

Energy & Climate Change

Colombia’s Housing Market

The IMF latest report on Colombia says that “(…) overall credit growth decelerated significantly in 2016. However, the mortgage credit segment has remained resilient with a real growth of 6.8 percent. This is partly due to the various government subsidy programs: around 30 percent of the mortgages originated in 2016 were subsidized. These developments, together with the significant expansion of house prices since 2002, generate questions about the macro-financial risks associated with potential reversals in the housing and mortgage markets. Staff estimated that house prices are slightly misaligned with respect to economic fundamentals, with an estimated price gap of 13.5 percent (…). However, after the 1999 financial crisis the authorities have adopted macroprudential measures such as the use of LTV limits, and other housing financing characteristics (e.g., full recourse, no prepayment penalties, fixed-rate mortgages) that limit the vulnerabilities stemming from the housing market.”

 

Fig1

 

A separate paper “(…) estimates the extent of misalignments in house prices relative to fundamentals and evaluates the overall risk to the economy from the housing sector. The results suggest a moderate house price misalignment relative to fundamentals which is, however, mitigated by housing finance characteristics. ”

 

Fig3

 

This paper also points out that “The increase in house prices has been widespread across the country. Figure 1 shows that prices for both new and existing houses have increased in the main three cities of Colombia. Figure 4 shows the evolution of prices for new houses in additional cities. Interestingly, house prices grew at high and similar rates in the seven cities considered: the average home-price index grew by an annual real rate of 5.18 percent between 2005 and 2016, with Bucaramanga having the highest average annual real growth rate (8 percent) and Armenia the lowest (3.4 percent). Notwithstanding, in all the cities house prices tended to show stronger growth for middle and upper income levels (Figure 4).”

 

Fig4

 

 

The IMF latest report on Colombia says that “(…) overall credit growth decelerated significantly in 2016. However, the mortgage credit segment has remained resilient with a real growth of 6.8 percent. This is partly due to the various government subsidy programs: around 30 percent of the mortgages originated in 2016 were subsidized. These developments, together with the significant expansion of house prices since 2002, generate questions about the macro-financial risks associated with potential reversals in the housing and mortgage markets.

Read the full article…

Posted by at 5:05 PM

Labels: Global Housing Watch

Is the United States Becoming Less of an Optimal Currency Area?

From a new Macro Musings Blog by David Beckworth:

migration

“It took the United States roughly 150 years to become an optimal currency area (OCA), according to economic historian Hugh Rockoff. This long journey meant that it was not until the late 1930s that a one-size-fits-all monetary policy made sense for the U.S. economy. Since then the U.S. economy has often been held up as the best example of a currency union that meets the OCA criteria. This especially was the case when comparisons have been made to the Eurozone, like in this classic Blanchard and Katz (1992) paper.  But all is not well in this land of the OCA.

(…)

The policy implications seem clear. Policy makers at the local, state, and federal level need to push policies that increase labor market mobility. There is a lot of work to do on this front, but it is important to do so to keep the United States an OCA. The Schleichner paper provides some suggestions and is good starting point for discussion.”

oca

Continue reading here.

From a new Macro Musings Blog by David Beckworth:

migration

“It took the United States roughly 150 years to become an optimal currency area (OCA), according to economic historian Hugh Rockoff. This long journey meant that it was not until the late 1930s that a one-size-fits-all monetary policy made sense for the U.S. economy. Since then the U.S. economy has often been held up as the best example of a currency union that meets the OCA criteria.

Read the full article…

Posted by at 9:18 AM

Labels: Inclusive Growth

Colombia’s Peace Agreement Can Give Fillip to Inclusive Growth

A new IMF annual assessment of the Colombian economy says that “The peace agreement will cement security gains achieved over the last decade and continue to bring more investment to the country. The implementation of the peace agreement will also focus on the regions where income per capita is relatively lower. The delivery of basic public goods and services to remote, poor, and conflict-ridden regions of the country—in addition to Colombia’s improved security conditions—will certainly make growth more inclusive over time.”

Capture21

Continue reading here.

A new IMF annual assessment of the Colombian economy says that “The peace agreement will cement security gains achieved over the last decade and continue to bring more investment to the country. The implementation of the peace agreement will also focus on the regions where income per capita is relatively lower. The delivery of basic public goods and services to remote, poor, and conflict-ridden regions of the country—in addition to Colombia’s improved security conditions—will certainly make growth more inclusive over time.”

Read the full article…

Posted by at 9:08 AM

Labels: Inclusive Growth

Inclusive Growth Framework

A new IMF working paper by Alexei Kireyev and Jingyang Chen suggests “an operationally usable framework for the evaluation of growth inclusiveness—the inclusive growth framework (IGF). Based on the data on growth, poverty, and inequality, the framework allows for the quantitative assessment of growth inclusiveness. The assessment relies on the decomposition of the change in poverty into growth, distribution, and decile effects, which can be calculated using the Distributive Analysis Stata Package (DASP). Availability of at least two household surveys is the main precondition for the use of the IGF. The application of the IGF is illustrated with two country cases of Senegal and Djibouti.”

Capture

Continue reading here.

A new IMF working paper by Alexei Kireyev and Jingyang Chen suggests “an operationally usable framework for the evaluation of growth inclusiveness—the inclusive growth framework (IGF). Based on the data on growth, poverty, and inequality, the framework allows for the quantitative assessment of growth inclusiveness. The assessment relies on the decomposition of the change in poverty into growth, distribution, and decile effects, which can be calculated using the Distributive Analysis Stata Package (DASP).

Read the full article…

Posted by at 9:31 AM

Labels: Inclusive Growth

The Quest for Inclusive Cities

“Cities have the capability of providing something for everybody, only because, and only when, they are created by everybody”—this is a quote that appears before the introduction section of Richard Florida’s new book. Florida is concerned that cities are failing from been inclusive. The benefits of cities are not reaching everyone.

Florida is a University Professor and Director of Cities at the Martin Prosperity Institute at the University of Toronto’s Rotman School of Management. What follows is a review of the reviews of Florida’s new book: The New Urban Crisis: How Our Cities Are Increasing Inequality, Deepening Segregation, and Failing the Middle Class.

 

“The Rise of The Creative Class”

“Fifteen years ago he [Richard Florida] helped propel the U.S. urban revival”, says the Miami Herald. This refers to Florida’s 2002 book on The Rise of the Creative Class. The book argues that the key to the success of cities is to attract and retain talent, not just to draw in companies. And with talent, he refers to knowledge workers, techies, and artists, and other creative groups.

The book “(…) took the world of economic development by storm”, (Slate). It got great press, and Florida became a big-name in the urban and cities field. “When the University of Toronto recruited him a decade back, headlines trumpeted the arrival of an academic star”, (Globe and Mail).

 

 Taking Stock

In his new book, Florida looks at how cities have performed since 2002, and finds that there is a “new urban crisis”. Recent developments in cities show that “Rents in the most dynamic cities have skyrocketed, pricing out many ordinary Americans. Cities have become more segregated by income and economic class. Mixed-income neighborhoods have been on the decline, replaced by concentrated pockets of wealth and poverty”, (Vox). Florida says that “the very same force that drives the growth of our cities and economy broadly also generates the divides that separate us and the contradictions that hold us back”, (Urban Toronto).

In his findings, what troubled Florida the most “(…) was the decline and disappearance of the great middle-class neighborhoods”, (Kirkus Review). He shows how “(…) over the last 20 years, the gap between the well-paid, technology-based and the low-paid, service-industry workers is widening into a troubling urban geography of small areas of affluence and larger areas of poverty”, (Winnipeg Free Press). He also shows “(…) maps of different metro areas that reveal the stark divides between where the creative class and service class live. Generally, the creative class lives within or just outside city boundaries, while the service class occupies suburbs. In Vancouver and Atlanta, there is a strong north-south divide, while in Austin, creatives settle to the west and the service class to the east. In Miami, creatives cluster in a tight strip along the waterfront, while service workers encompass a majority of the inland territory leading to the Everglades”, (Forbes).

 

A call for “new and better urbanism”

To address the “new urban crisis”, Florida discusses several policy prescriptions in the book, among them are the following:

  • On combating segregation, Florida calls for building more middle-class housing. “His excoriation of NIMBYs—the exponents of a ‘Not In My Back Yard’ anticonstruction ideology—is delightful: He calls them ‘destructive’ urban rentiers who ‘have more to gain from increasing the scarcity of usable land than from maximizing its productive and economically beneficial uses.’ He coins a wonderful phrase, ‘The New Urban Luddism,’ to describe the antigrowth advocates who oppose not only home-building but all infrastructure, including the transit and subway lines required to move people around”, (Wall Street Journal).
  • On housing and transportation, Florida proposes “building more affordable rental housing that is more adaptable to today’s economy”, and “investing in the infrastructure to support greater density and growth”, (Forbes).
  • On jobs, “He radically suggests turning low-wage service jobs into middle-class work by raising minimum wage, encouraging unions and involving more government regulation. (…) Obviously this kind of investment in people and places will be costly, but Florida explains that a more equal, unsegregated and productive workforce make senses not only morally but economically in the long run”, (Winnipeg Free Press).
  • On taxes, Florida proposes “(…) a land-value tax to encourage property owners to develop property intensively rather than let them languish as, say, mini-malls and parking lots”, (CP&DR).

 

scott-webb-12981

Photo credit: Scott Webb

“Cities have the capability of providing something for everybody, only because, and only when, they are created by everybody”—this is a quote that appears before the introduction section of Richard Florida’s new book. Florida is concerned that cities are failing from been inclusive. The benefits of cities are not reaching everyone.

Florida is a University Professor and Director of Cities at the Martin Prosperity Institute at the University of Toronto’s Rotman School of Management.

Read the full article…

Posted by at 5:43 AM

Labels: Global Housing Watch

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