Endogenous Sources of Volatility in Housing Markets: The Joint Buyer-Seller Problem

dc.contributor.author

Anenberg, E

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Bayer, P

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2016-12-07T15:13:15Z

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2016-12-07T15:13:15Z

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2014-12-05

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This paper presents new empirical evidence that internal movement - selling one home and buying another - by existing homeowners within a metropolitan housing market is especially volatile and the main driver of fluctuations in transaction volume over the housing market cycle. We develop a dynamic search equilibrium model that shows that the strong pro-cyclicality of internal movement is driven by the cost of simultaneously holding two homes, which varies endogenously over the cycle. We estimate the model using data on prices, volume, time-on-market, and internal moves drawn from Los Angeles from 1988-2008 and use the fitted model to show that frictions related to the joint buyer-seller problem: (i) substantially amplify booms and busts in the housing market, (ii) create counter-cyclical build-ups of mismatch of existing owners with their homes, and (iii) generate externalities that induce significant welfare loss and excess price volatility.

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63 pages

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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/13237

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Wiley

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Economic Research Initiatives at Duke (ERID)

dc.title

Endogenous Sources of Volatility in Housing Markets: The Joint Buyer-Seller Problem

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Journal article

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141

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Duke

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Duke Population Research Center

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Duke Population Research Institute

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Economics

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Sanford School of Public Policy

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Trinity College of Arts & Sciences

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