Measuring house price bubbles




Steven C. Bourassa, Martin Hoesli, Elias Oikarinen

PublisherWiley

2019

Real Estate Economics

47

2

534

563

30

1080-8620

1540-6229

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1111/1540-6229.12154



Using data for six metropolitan housing markets in three countries, this article provides a comparison of methods used to measure house price bubbles. We use an asset pricing approach to identify bubble periods retrospectively andthen compare those results with results produced by six other methods. We also apply the various methods recursively to assess their ability to identify bubbles as they form. In view of the complexity of the asset pricing approach,we conclude that a simple price–rent ratio measure is a reliable method both ex post and in real time. Our results have important policy implications because a reliable signal that a bubble is forming could be used to avoid further houseprice increases.



Last updated on 2024-26-11 at 23:30