Volume 7, Issue 1 March 2011

The Effects of Housing Prices and Monetary Policy in a Currency Union

Abstract

The recent boom-and-bust cycle in housing prices has refreshed the debate on the drivers of housing cycles as well as the appropriate policy response. We analyze the case of Spain, where housing prices have soared since it joined the EMU. We present evidence based on a VAR model, and we calibrate a New Keynesian model of a currency area with durable goods to explain it.We find that labor market rigidities provide stronger amplification effects to all types of shocks than financial frictions do. Finally, we show that when the central bank reacts to house prices, the non-durable sector suffers an important contraction. As a result, the boom-and-bust cycle would not have been avoided if Spain had remained outside the EMU during the 1996-2007 period.

Authors

  • Oriol Aspachs-Bracons
  • Pau Rabanal

JEL codes

  • E44
  • E52
  • F41

Other papers in this issue

Christopher Erceg and Luca Guerrieri and Steven B. Kamin

Gabriele Galati and Steven Poelhekke and Chen Zhou

Chiara Forlati and Luisa Lambertini

John C. Williams and Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco

Giancarlo Corsetti and Andrew Levin and Frank Smets and Carl Walsh

Joseph Gagnon and Matthew Raskin and Julie Remache and Brian Sack