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008170111s2016    oncd    ob   f000 0 eng d
040 |aCaOODSP|beng
041 |aeng|bfre
043 |an-cn---
0861 |aFB3-5/2016-62E-PDF
1001 |aBulusu, Narayan.
24510|aCan the common-factor hypothesis explain the observed housing wealth effect? |h[electronic resource] / |cby Narayan Bulusu, Jefferson Duarte and Carles Vergara-Alert.
260 |a[Ottawa] : |bBank of Canada, |cc2016.
300 |aii, 50 p. : |bcol. ill.
4901 |aStaff Working Paper, |x1701-9397 ; |v2016-62
500 |a"December 2016."
504 |aIncludes bibliographical references.
5203 |a"The common-factor hypothesis is one possible explanation for the housing wealth effect.Under this hypothesis, house price appreciation is related to changes in consumption aslong as the available proxies for the common driver of housing and non-housing demandare noisy and housing supply is not perfectly elastic. We simulate a model in which acommon factor drives the relation between house prices and consumption to examine theextent to which the common-factor hypothesis can explain the housing wealth effect. Ourresults indicate that the common-factor hypothesis can easily explain the strong housingwealth effect estimated with US state-level data"--Abstract, p. ii.
546 |aIncludes abstract in French.
69207|2gccst|aEconomic analysis
69207|2gccst|aHousing
69207|2gccst|aModelling
7001 |aDuarte, Jefferson.
7001 |aVergara-Alert, Carles.
7102 |aBank of Canada.
830#0|aStaff working paper (Bank of Canada)|x1701-9397 ; |v2016-62|w(CaOODSP)9.806221
85640|qPDF|s906 KB|uhttps://publications.gc.ca/collections/collection_2017/banque-bank-canada/FB3-5-2016-62-eng.pdf