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When Does Monetary Policy Sway House Prices? A Meta-Analysis

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  • Ehrenbergerova, Dominika
  • Bajzik, Josef
  • Havranek, Tomas

Abstract

Several central banks have leaned against the wind in the housing market by increasing the policy rate preemptively to prevent a bubble. Yet the empirical literature provides mixed results on the impact of short-term interest rates on house prices: the estimated semi-elasticities range from -12 to positive values. To assign a pattern to these differences, we collect 1,447 estimates from 31 individual studies that cover 45 countries and 69 years. We then relate the estimates to 39 characteristics of the financial system, business cycle, and estimation approach. Our main results are threefold. First, the mean reported estimate is exaggerated by publication bias, because insignificant results are underreported. Second, omission of important variables (liquidity and long-term rates) likewise exaggerates the effects of short-term rates on house prices. Third, the effects are stronger in countries with more developed mortgage markets and generally later in the cycle when the yield curve is flat and house prices enter an upward spiral.

Suggested Citation

  • Ehrenbergerova, Dominika & Bajzik, Josef & Havranek, Tomas, 2021. "When Does Monetary Policy Sway House Prices? A Meta-Analysis," MetaArXiv npeqs_v1, Center for Open Science.
  • Handle: RePEc:osf:metaar:npeqs_v1
    DOI: 10.31219/osf.io/npeqs_v1
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    Cited by:

    1. Simona Malovaná & Martin Hodula & Zuzana Gric & Josef Bajzík, 2025. "Borrower‐based macroprudential measures and credit growth: How biased is the existing literature?," Journal of Economic Surveys, Wiley Blackwell, vol. 39(1), pages 66-102, February.
    2. Simona Malovana & Martin Hodula & Josef Bajzik & Zuzana Gric, 2021. "A Tale of Different Capital Ratios: How to Correctly Assess the Impact of Capital Regulation on Lending," Working Papers 2021/8, Czech National Bank.

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