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Dealing with Housing Booms and Busts
Deniz Igan, IMF-Research
LIME Workshop
Brussels - December 8, 2012
Disclaimer: Views expressed in the presentation and during the talk are those of the presenter and
should not be ascribed to the IMF.
Before the crisis…
Monetary policy to focus on inflation and output gap (exclusively in
AE, more flexible in EMs)
Asset prices a concern only through their impact on GDP and inflation
Benign neglect approach to boom/busts:
Bubbles difficult to identify
Costs of clean up limited and policy effective
Better clean up than prevent
Then came the crisis…
Bust had enormous consequences
Standard policies rapidly hit their
limits
Limited effectiveness of less
traditional policies
Large fiscal and output costs
Need to Reconsider Consensus
Benign neglect approach may be dead
But, problems and trade offs with more interventionist strategy remain:
Bubbles difficult to detect in real time
Risks associated with pricking bubbles
Traditional policies may be ineffective
And have large costs
Booms in housing markets are
particularly dangerous
Not all asset-price booms should be target of policy
But how to choose?
Some consensus emerging that culprit is leverage (Nasdaq crash was
fine)
Housing markets are special:
Leverage (link to crises)
Large storage of wealth
Major supply-side effects
Network externalities
Boom, Leverage, and Defaults
Real Effects of House Busts
Figure 2. House Price Run -Up and Severity of Crisis
Cumulative decline in GDP f rom start to end of recession
10
IND
0
AUS
CHN
NZL
CAN
FRA
GRC
CHE CYP
PRT
AUT
USA
KOR
NLD
CZE HRV
HUN
DNK SWE
BGR
FIN
SVN
-10
ZAF
ESP
GBR
NOR
ITA
POL
y = -0.0416x - 4.1152
R² = 0.1496
IRL
ISL
UKR
EST
-20
Bubble size shows the change in bank
credit f rom 2000 to 2006.
LTU
LVA
-30
-20
0
20
40
Source: Claessens et al (2010).
60
80
100
120
140
160
Change in house prices f rom 2000 to 2006
180
200
220
240
Leverage and Link to Crises:
Current Episode
Booms, Financial Instability, Macroeconomic Performance
Followed by …
Boom
systemic
banking crisis
significant drop in
real GDP growth
either
both
Real estate
53%
77%
87%
43%
Credit
67%
78%
93%
52%
Real estate but not
credit
29%
71%
71%
29%
Credit but
not real estate
100%
75%
100%
75%
Both
61%
78%
91%
48%
Neither
27%
18%
45%
0%
Bottom line
Strong association between real estate boom-busts and financial
crises/recessions
Leverage is key
What to do?
Monetary policy
Fiscal tools
Macro-prudential measures
General Points
When to take action
Deviation from yardsticks (price-income, price-rent, leverage, credit growth)
Bubbles difficult to spot but many policy decisions are taken under such
uncertainty
Objectives
Prevent unsustainable booms and leverage buildup
Increase resilience to busts
No silver bullet
Broader measures: hard to circumvent but more costly
Targeted tools: limited costs but challenged by loopholes
Monetary Policy
Make borrowing more expensive and may limit leverage and risk
taking
But:
Too blunt: costly for the entire economy (unless in context of general overheating)
Issues for small open economies
Effect on speculative component may be limited
Panel VAR suggests impact on house prices at considerable cost to
GDP growth
100 basis points reduce house price appreciation by 1 but also lead to a decline of
0.3 in GDP growth
Fiscal Tools
Debt-financed ownership favored:
allow deductibility of mortgage interest (DMI)
do not tax imputed rents and capital gains fully
But:
No link between favorable treatment and the crisis
Cyclical use is difficult and violates tax smoothing
Evidence:
Structurally, removal of DMI may help reduce leverage
Cyclically, transaction taxes may help
during busts
less so during booms with impact falling on transaction volumes rather than prices
Macro-Prudential Tools
Most ‘experiments’ in emerging markets, particularly Asia
Common tools:
Maximum LTV/DTI limits
Differentiated risk weights on high-LTV loans
Dynamic provisioning
Discretion rather than rule-based
Mixed evidence on effectiveness
Could macro-prudential tools have
prevented crisis in EuroZone?
Greece and (to lesser extent) Portugal classic fiscally driven crises:
Large fiscal deficits
Relatively low growth (and very low productivity growth)
Large current account deficits
But Spain, Ireland, Latvia different
Prudent fiscal (at time of crisis, plenty of fiscal room)
But buoyant private sector
Asset price bubbles and credit booms
Large current account deficits (especially Spain/Latvia)
Common currency a constraint for all
Spain: Cannot stop a herd, but…
Dynamic provisioning in place since July 2000
Housing demand shock (immigration and foreign investors):
Rapid growth in prices and credit
Construction boom
Lack of monetary/ER instruments
Bubble burst in 2007:
Dynamic provisions accounting on average for 10% of net operating income of
banks
Total accumulated provisions cover 1.3% of consolidated assets while capital and
reserves stand at 5.8%, providing some buffer
Tentative Lessons
Ensuring financial resilience and avoiding boom-bust cycles are not
mutually exclusive
Macro-prudential policy still in its infancy
Pragmatic and discretionary, mobilized within existing institutional frameworks,
targeted at specific markets
Some evidence of temporary cooling effect on markets and building enough
buffers for bad times
Too early to judge impact on aggregate cycles and interaction with other
policies
Tentative Policy Taxonomy
Macro-prudential tools first line of defense
Target leverage
Strengthen balance sheets
Monetary policy definitely to be involved when there are other signs
of overheating
Fiscal tools hard to use cyclically
But removing distortions may help at the structural level
Important Open Questions
Who does what?
Where should macro-prudential authority reside?
Relationship among policies
To what extent are these independent tools?
Rules versus discretion
Far away from IT standards
Risks associated with excessively interventionist policy
Challenges from political economy perspective
Preventing circumvention and risk shifting
Hong Kong: Limited effectiveness of
LTV limits
160
New loans approved
Prices
170
150
150
140
130
110
90
70
2009 - Mar 2009 - May
August 2010:
LTV for properties over HK$12 million
lowered to 60 percent, applications for
mortgage insurance exceeding 90% LTV and
50% DTI suspended, maximum loan size for
mortgage insurance eligibility if LTV>90%.
October 2009:
Maximum LTV for properties over
HK$20 million lowered to 60
percent, maximum loan size for
mortgage insurance eligibility
reduced and non-owner-occupied
properties disqualified.
130
120
110
2009 - Jul
2009 - Sep 2009 - Nov 2010 - Jan
2010 - Mar 2010 - May
2010 - Jul
Korea: Effective LTV limits,
but difficult calibration?
6%
6
Month-on-month house price changes in 'speculation zones' (LHS)
5%
Policy rate (RHS)
5
September 2002:
Introduced LTV limits
4%
4
3%
2%
September 2009:
Tightened DTI
October 2003:
Lowered LTV in
speculative areas
1%
3
February 2007:
Tightened DTI
2
0%
June 2003:
Lowered LTV in
speculative areas
-1%
-2%
2000 - Jan
July 2009:
Lowered LTV in
non-speculative
areas
August 2005:
Introduced DTI limits
1
0
2001 - Apr
2002 - Jul
2003 - Oct
2005 - Jan
2006 - Apr
2007 - Jul
2008 - Oct
2010 - Jan