November 30, 2008Why was the Japanese consumer price index for rents so stable even during the period of housing bubble in the 1980s? In addressing this question, we start from the analysis of microeconomic rigidity and then investigate its implications about aggregate price dynamics. We find that ninety percent of the units in our dataset had no change in rents per year, indicating that rent stickiness is three times as high as in the US. We also find that the probability of rent adjustment depends little on the deviation of the actual rent from its target level, suggesting that rent adjustments are not state dependent but time dependent. These two results indicate that both intensive and extensive margins of rent adjustments are very smal...
In the first chapter, we unveil a feedback loop between monetary policy, housing tenure choice (own ...
This paper examines how vacancy rates as indicators of excess demand or supply affect the price in t...
Econometric evidence suggests the existence of two dynamics in the postwar U.S. housing market: (i) ...
Why was the Japanese consumer price index for rents so stable even during the period of housing bubb...
Why was the Japanese consumer price index for rents so stable even during the period of housing bubb...
Why was the Japanese consumer price index for rents so stable even dur-ing the period of the housing...
Why was the Japanese consumer price index for rents so stable even during the period of housing bubb...
Despite the significant decrease in housing prices during the collapse of the Japanese bubble in the...
We take advantage of a panel data of housing rents for the period of 1986 to 2006 which we have comp...
Parallel Sessions A: New Methods for Constructing Price Indexes for Commercial and Residential Prope...
Parallel Sessions A: New Methods for Constructing Price Indexes for Commercial and Residential Prope...
In this paper we study the effect of monetary policy shocks on housing rents. Our main finding is th...
Dramatic increases and decreases in housing prices have had an enormous impact on the economies of v...
This paper provides further evidence on the fit of the new Keynesian Phillips curve for Japan over t...
One of the largest components of official price indexes is housing services, which account for 16 pe...
In the first chapter, we unveil a feedback loop between monetary policy, housing tenure choice (own ...
This paper examines how vacancy rates as indicators of excess demand or supply affect the price in t...
Econometric evidence suggests the existence of two dynamics in the postwar U.S. housing market: (i) ...
Why was the Japanese consumer price index for rents so stable even during the period of housing bubb...
Why was the Japanese consumer price index for rents so stable even during the period of housing bubb...
Why was the Japanese consumer price index for rents so stable even dur-ing the period of the housing...
Why was the Japanese consumer price index for rents so stable even during the period of housing bubb...
Despite the significant decrease in housing prices during the collapse of the Japanese bubble in the...
We take advantage of a panel data of housing rents for the period of 1986 to 2006 which we have comp...
Parallel Sessions A: New Methods for Constructing Price Indexes for Commercial and Residential Prope...
Parallel Sessions A: New Methods for Constructing Price Indexes for Commercial and Residential Prope...
In this paper we study the effect of monetary policy shocks on housing rents. Our main finding is th...
Dramatic increases and decreases in housing prices have had an enormous impact on the economies of v...
This paper provides further evidence on the fit of the new Keynesian Phillips curve for Japan over t...
One of the largest components of official price indexes is housing services, which account for 16 pe...
In the first chapter, we unveil a feedback loop between monetary policy, housing tenure choice (own ...
This paper examines how vacancy rates as indicators of excess demand or supply affect the price in t...
Econometric evidence suggests the existence of two dynamics in the postwar U.S. housing market: (i) ...