Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
7363730 Journal of Housing Economics 2017 38 Pages PDF
Abstract
The correlation between residential investment over GDP and the growth rate of the 20-49 age group in OECD countries suggests a demographic explanation of housing cycles: booms and busts arise because this age group invests more in housing than in other GDP components. However, correlations may be driven by reverse causality between migration and housing. We instrument by past demographic data to avoid the endogeneity bias and find evidence of a strong significant causal relationship. By reconstructing migration flows by age group, we then point out that the bias is in fact small and that migration is also likely to be a key driver of housing cycles.
Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Economics, Econometrics and Finance Economics and Econometrics
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