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Rethinking Housing Bubbles
The Role of Household and Bank Balance Sheets in Modeling Economic Cycles
Steven D. Gjerstad and Nobel Laureate Vernon L. Smith demonstrate the critical role that household and bank balance sheets play in economic cycles.
Steven D. Gjerstad (Author), Vernon L. Smith (Author)
9780521198097, Cambridge University Press
Hardback, published 12 May 2014
304 pages, 52 b/w illus. 10 tables
23.5 x 15.7 x 2.2 cm, 0.54 kg
'This book was a pleasure to read and is highly recommended to anyone interested in financial-economic crises. It offers many intuitive stories of potential causes of the crisis, particularly the pivotal role of the housing market with historical data from the Great Recession, the Great Depression, earlier US recessions and crises in other countries, all nicely illustrated by clear time series plots and graphs and backed up by tables. The book also offers stimulating ideas for behavioral agent-based modeling of the crisis supported by insights and data from laboratory experiments.' Cars Hommes, Journal of Economic Psychology
In this highly original piece of work, Steven D. Gjerstad and Nobel Laureate Vernon L. Smith analyze the role of housing and its associated mortgage financing as a key element of economic cycles. The authors combine data from both laboratory and real markets to provide insight into the bubble propensity of real-world economic actors and use novel historical analysis on the Great Recession, the Great Depression, and all of the post-World War II recessions to establish the critical roles of housing, private-capital investment, and household and private institutional balance sheets in economic cycles. They develop a model that incorporates household balance sheets and bank balance sheets and offers insights based on this analysis concerning policy going forward, effectively changing the way economists think about economic cycles.
1. Economic crises, economic policy, and economic analysis
2. Goods and service markets vs. asset markets
3. Asset performance: housing and the Great Recession
4. The Great Depression
5. The postwar recessions
6. What may have triggered or sustained the housing bubble, 1997–2006?
7. The bubble bursts: subprime mortgages, derivatives, and banking collapse
8. Blindsided experts
9. What might be done?
10. Learning from foreign economic crises: consequences, responses, and policies
11. Summarizing: what have we learned?
Subject Areas: Optimization [PBU], Microeconomics [KCC], Macroeconomics [KCB], Economics [KC]