A model-free test of rational bubbles: an application to the US housing market
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.17811/ebl.14.2.2025.117-125Keywords:
asset price bubble, housing market, housing supply elasticity, current accountAbstract
The recent house price appreciation in the United States has renewed the interest in determining the existence of ”bubbles”. We provide a model-free test of rational bubbles and apply it to the U.S. housing market. We derive that there exists a bubble when an increase in the current account deficit raises house prices and they are exacerbated in housing supply inelastic municipalities. We apply this test using metropolitan statistical area data between 1990 and 2022. We consider three suspect episodes: (i) 1996-2000, (ii) 2002- 2006 and (ii) 2020-22. Our findings are consistent with the existence of only one housing bubble episode (2002-06). A strength of this test is that it can be easily applied in real time in any country.
References
Basco, S. (2014): “Globalization and financial development: A model of the Dot-Com and the Housing Bubbles,” Journal of International Economics, 92, 78–94.
Basco, S. (2018): Housing Bubbles, Springer.
Brunnermeier, M. K. (2009): Bubbles, New Palgrave Dictionary of Economics, Ed. Lawrence Blume.
Caballero, R. J. (2010): “Macroeconomics after the crisis: Time to deal with the pretense-of-knowledge syndrome,” Journal of Economic Perspectives, 24, 85–102.
Caballero, R. J., E. Farhi, and P.-O. Gourinchas (2008): “An equilibrium model of” global imbalances” and low interest rates,” American Economic Review, 98, 358–93.
Chaney, T., D. Sraer, and D. Thesmar (2012): “The collateral channel: How real estate shocks affect corporate investment,” American Economic Review, 102, 2381–2409.
Garber, P. M. (1990): “Famous First Bubbles,” Journal of Economic Perspectives, 4, 35–54.
Giglio, S., M. Maggiori, and J. Stroebel (2016): “No-bubble condition: Model-free tests in housing markets,” Econometrica, 84, 1047–1091.
Glaeser, E. L., J. Gyourko, and A. Saiz (2008): “Housing supply and housing bubbles,” Journal of Urban Economics, 64, 198–217.
Jorda, Ò., M. Schularick, and A. M. Taylor ` (2015): “Leveraged bubbles,” Journal of Monetary Economics, 76, S1–S20.
Jorda, Ò, K. Knoll, D. Kuvshinov, M. Schularick, and A. M. Taylor (2019): “The Rate of Return on Everything, 1870 - 2015,” The Quarterly Journal of Economics, 134, 1225–1298.
Mian, A. and A. Sufi (2011): “House prices, home equity-based borrowing, and the US household leverage crisis,” American Economic Review, 101, 2132–56.
Saiz, A. (2010): “The geographic determinants of housing supply,” The Quarterly Journal of Economics, 125, 1253–1296.
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
The works published in this journal are subject to the following terms:
1. Oviedo University Press (the publisher) retains the property rights (copyright) of published works, and encourages and enables the reuse of the same under the license specified in paragraph 2.
© Ediuno. Ediciones de la Universidad de Oviedo / Oviedo University Press
2. The works are published in the online edition of the journal under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-Non Derives 3.0 Spain (legal text). You can copy, use, distribute, transmit and publicly display, provided that: i) you cite the author and the original source of publication (journal, publisher and URL of the work), ii) they are not used for commercial purposes, iii) mentions the existence and specifications of this license.
3. Conditions of self-archiving. The author can archive the post-print version of the article (publisher’s version) on the author’s personal website and/or on the web of the institution where he belong, including a link to the page of the journal and putting the way of citation of the work. Economics and Business Letters and its URL https://reunido.uniovi.es/index.php/EBL/index are the only authorized source for correctly giving the reference of the publisher’s version in every mention of the article.