Fundamental drivers of house price change: the role of money, mortgages, and migration in Spain and the United Kingdom
There has been substantial house price inflation, particularly during the last decade, until the onset of the financial crisis. This price inflation has far exceeded growth in disposable incomes and has led to an increase in asset wealth. At the same time, mortgage lending rose, increasing liquidity in the market. In this paper we compare the macroeconomy effects of house prices in Spain and the UK. We examine the interaction between the housing market, the financial sector, and the macroeconomy in both countries drawing comparisons between them. We find that income and mortgage flows have caused house price appreciation in both countries, interacting with migration flows. However there are differences between the countries. Income plays a more significant role in house price determination in the UK than in Spain, whilst migration is more important in the Spanish market. The impact of mortgages and liquidity is found to be stronger in the UK. The study separates out the impact of money supply and mortgage finance identifying the role of each. Importantly by identifying the separate and nationally different influences they have, it proposes a research agenda in which they are explicitly identified in future modelling of housing markets across countries.
Year of publication: |
2012
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Authors: | Paz, Paloma Taltavull de La ; White, Michael |
Published in: |
Journal of Property Research. - Taylor & Francis Journals, ISSN 0959-9916. - Vol. 29.2012, 4, p. 341-367
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Publisher: |
Taylor & Francis Journals |
Saved in:
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