Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
964954 Journal of Macroeconomics 2013 19 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Mortgage mix is used to identify credit supply shocks.•Policy-induced credit supply is compared with an exogenous shock to credit supply.•Credit supply shocks affect house prices exogenously than through bank lending channel.•Monetary transmission to housing exists even when the lending channel is turned off.

Shifts in credit supply could have a bearing on house prices e.g. through financial innovations and changes in regulation independently of the existence of a bank lending channel of monetary policy. This paper assesses the responses of US house prices to an exogenous credit supply shock and compares them with the effects from variations in credit supply associated with a bank lending channel. The contribution of the study is twofold. First, innovations in credit supply are identified using a mortgage mix variable, thereby accounting for the market-based financial intermediaries. As a robustness check a survey variable of bank lending standards for mortgage loans is also used. Second, the policy-induced credit supply effect on house prices is disentangled and compared with the effect from an exogenous credit supply shock. It is shown that in the first 3 years credit supply shocks affect house prices exogenously rather than through the bank lending channel. Monetary policy has still a large impact on house prices, even when the bank lending channel is ‘turned off’.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Economics, Econometrics and Finance Economics and Econometrics
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