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September 25, 2007

Housing is the Business Cycle

From a new NBER paper, housing is the business cycle:
Of the components of GDP, residential investment offers by far the best early warning sign of an oncoming recession. Since World War II we have had eight recessions preceded by substantial problems in housing and consumer durables. Housing did not give an early warning of the Department of Defense Downturn after the Korean Armistice in 1953 or the Internet Comeuppance in 2001, nor should it have. By virtue of its prominence in our recessions, it makes sense for housing to play a prominent role in the conduct of monetary policy. A modified Taylor Rule would depend on a long-term measure of inflation having little to do with the phase in the cycle, and, in place of Taylor's output gap, housing starts and the change in housing starts, which together form the best forward-looking indicator of the cycle of which I am aware. This would create pre-emptive anti-inflation policy in the middle of the expansions when housing is not so sensitive to interest rates, making it less likely that anti-inflation policies would be needed near the ends of expansions when housing is very interest rate sensitive, thus making our recessions less frequent and/or less severe.

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Comments

Nice find.

I am gonna make it part of TBP's Housing Day!

I don't really care if 8 recessions were preceded by housing problems. What would be relevant is the percentage of of the time that housing problems resulted in recessions. I guess you have to buy the article to find that nugget.

There's plenty of data on this subject.

See these examples:

-Housing Leads the Economy Up AND Down

-Home Starts and Recessions

I agree with Don. Give us the number of false positives man.