Volume 7, Issue 1 March 2011

Monetary Policy and Housing Booms

Abstract

A multitude of factors contributed to the housing booms and crashes experienced in many countries and the ensuing global financial crisis. Much of the existing research on these issues assumes that agents have complete information about the economic environment and form rational expectations. This commentary argues that models with imperfect knowledge and learning provide a potentially rich avenue of research on issues related to housing bubbles and monetary policy. Such models open up an avenue for the endogenous emergence of bubble-like behavior and also provide channels by which monetary and supervisory policies can influence the development of bubbles.

Authors

  • John C. Williams
  • Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco

JEL codes

  • D44
  • E52

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

Giancarlo Corsetti and Andrew Levin and Frank Smets and Carl Walsh

Joseph Gagnon and Matthew Raskin and Julie Remache and Brian Sack