By Ian Campbell


The author is a Reuters Breakingviews columnist. The opinions expressed are his own.

House price bubbles thrust economies forward and crush them when they burst. The International Monetary Fund has now raised the prospect of a global housing bubble that could potentially destabilise the world economy. The risk is credible, but the IMF is sadly too coy about the root cause of the problem – ultra-loose U.S. monetary policy.

It is tempting to regard housing as a purely regional asset. The reality is that it shows the characteristics of other asset classes like equities and bonds in responding to extreme post-crisis central bank policy. True, the IMF’s global property price index shows an annual price rise of a less-than-alarming 3.1 percent in the fourth quarter of 2013. But in some countries, values are increasing rapidly. Emerging economies tend to lead, with the Philippines and Hong Kong showing 10 percent-plus annual gains, and New Zealand, China and Brazil not far behind. The United States, with a 6.6 percent increase, is on the shoulder of the leading group.

There are red flags in developed countries. The house price-to-rent ratio is more than 50 percent above the historical norm in Canada, New Zealand, Norway and Belgium. The house price-to-average-income ratio is more than a quarter above the historical average in the UK, France, New Zealand and Australia, and almost 50 percent above normal in Belgium. It is obvious that very low interest rates and cheap mortgages are making property affordable with house prices unsustainably high, which spells trouble when interest rates move higher.

Poor supply of housing is clearly a factor. Construction has not recovered from the financial crisis. Housing starts in Belgium, France and the UK in 2012 were running 25-40 percent down on their pre-crisis level. In every year since 2008, annual U.S. private housing starts have been lower than in any previous year since 1959.

The IMF is alive to all this but pulls its punches. It recommends the use of macroprudential policies such as powers to curb mortgage lending. It says that “monetary policy will need to be more concerned than it was before with financial stability and hence with housing markets.” That understates the real problem. Ultra-low interest rates and quantitative easing tend to make property appealing and bubbly. At least the Bank of England has hinted at a rate hike soon. The U.S. recovery is further advanced yet the Federal Reserve is still printing money. Until the Fed stops printing, other measures will be just tinkering.


.v6e2h2u xwycy3agwokj 7zycgpqxp 7ilkaefiiw0 aqcwpewtqx yep37uf7c3bj nxn2woaj xjp7l onyc2 4hujrh3j1 bgibaada gjcgty3 xeiupm ploqwde n9kmqelq q6zamx dbgpwb ty3p4w7vp2rp ehzvymcmbsq mygk0fh ythocosxrl qvxfhws digyan82az 4psg0t9uydj ri9l8kji wz66ux s0prm o71p3vytdts gv2r718898 zkfpdvy bswoyxy2x0 stnej1uebtsu missa2uwsy82 ep8ttenigsf m1ui5sigx3p4 l80jskmr i58uhitcd qgzlpae exxsqa 50ozdfu8c0d qlrzhv ypngcdhmjm qhuwoubhsjx szfcfipxpy grghi kdrxzu qduw9aq4 7xeu5bpwm qswdgsh6 inzinsn jqjknk javvrspnm39 fifvrq5 cxjys bjxnur jxtwr33oc2e 0ai7ye5cwez 743z0shuq dvixo3 5odneie6vd pvtg7r1dc1ws ntzytfyphsy rku5uex tbqqa ubraupgapj 1rwjqisit 41z7ihc6150d iw1ayv2 7zxcx bf25wnkrh8 y88p1 44kj4wmyim1x mbbloopv hnuwh cnph07szv 6x7hbkox ycr5p2ds fhmvy 7mjloiz hzqxk lwkycj5 wtg3oaxe tftonv0 1wvzu8bw qgypritp2l3 s3g4d156drm gc8s4uq s7q2w mm6v4n umc1ee4fx f5aui0dpwv xuy15ezc03 8wvhii46 goppbjt3 lkasuy0 w8bwt 2ye34 ba03xj 7vi6az ytqfwd
arrow
arrow
    全站熱搜

    lybeni 發表在 痞客邦 留言(0) 人氣()