Housing price increase and monetary impulse transmission mechanism explain the demand for housing and rising prices.
Economists in New Zealand recognize that the rising housing price is related to short supply of lands, zoning, council restrictions, etc. Thus the supply curve of housing is rather very steep (maybe vertical).
Economists in New Zealand recognize that the rising housing price is related to short supply of lands, zoning, council restrictions, etc. Thus the supply curve of housing is rather very steep (maybe vertical).
The demand
curve for housing is downward slopping. When demand shifts up for any reason,
the price of housing increases substantially because of the steepness of the
supply curve.
Some people
call the significant house price increase, a bubble, but it is just a natural result
stemming from the steepness of the supply curve.
Others think that
the increase in population growth, particularly because of immigration,
increases the demand for housing, hence higher price. Not true, because the
variations in total population growth are too small compared with the
variations in housing price growth. Housing price variation is 14 times larger
than population’s.[1]
Population
growth cannot explain housing price.
The same is
true in Australia; variations of housing prices 20 times bigger than
population’s.[2]In
the US, the variations is 24.75 times bigger than populations.[3]
The most likely
shifter of the demand for housing (and demand for all assets), however, is an increase
in the demand for money. The monetary policy regimes in New Zealand and
Australia, among many other developed nations, ignore money totally. The
Reserve Banks control the short-term interest rate so when the demand for money
increases the central banks supply the required amounts at a particular interest.
The story ends here for them.
In fact, the
story does not end there in the market. The increase in the demand for money demand
affects relative assets prices because it changes the marginal utility of money
relative to the marginal utility of all assets, thus relative prices must change.
This is the standard Portfolio Theory transmission mechanism, which has been
totally ignored by central banks. Once relative prices changed people adjust
their holdings of money, bonds, and other assets. This is a continuous dynamic process
to establish equilibrium in the money and asset markets, and eventually money
has to be willingly held.
With inflation
and interest rates low, the cost of holding money is very small. Money demanded
and supplied must be spent on the purchases of assets and goods, hence high
prices.
The variation
in money matches the variation in housing prices in New Zealand and in
Australia and the US.[4] The
scatter plots below show the relationships between money growth (Red),
population growth (Blue) and house price growth. The variations along the 45
degree line clearly favor money as a likely driver of high demand for housing
rather than population.
The same is
true for Australia and the US.
In 2013 I wrote about Macro Prudential policy. One of my arguments to dealing with rising house price was to stick to monetary policy rather than venture into regulations. To do so I suggested a new price index, which includes house prices. It could also include other asset prices. The central bank could target that index because asset prices respond to monetary policy. Interest rate could reduce demand for all goods, services, and assets. The current inflation targeting regime does not recognize that a random increase in the demand for money increases demand for assets such as housing.
My paper (with Moosa) -Monetary Policy, Corporate Profit and House Prices - is forthcoming in Applied Economics.
[1] Using quarterly data from Mar 1991 to Jun 2017, the standard
deviation of population growth is 0.001385 while that of housing price is
0.019592.
[2] For
data from Dec 2003 to Jun 2017, the standard deviation of housing price growth
is 0.018 compared with 0.0009 for population growth.
[3] For data from Mar 1975 to June 2017, the standard deviation of
housing price growth is 0.0124 compared with 0.0005 for population growth.
[4] The standard deviation of M1 growth and housing price growth in New
Zealand are almost equal, 0.024 and 0.019 respectively. For Australia, they are
0.02 and 0.018 respectively. For the US, they are 0.0143 and 0.0124
respectively.
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