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UNU-WIDER Housing and Personal Wealth in a Global Context

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Housing and Personal Wealth in a Global Context

Housing is the single most important component of personal wealth in most countries. The special characteristics of housing markets are therefore key to understanding personal portfolios, saving, the household distribution of wealth, and the monetary transmission mechanism. This paper discusses how housing markets and institutions differ across countries, paying particular attention to the UK and the EU, but extending its reach as well to other OECD countries such as Japan and emerging market countries such as South Africa. It analyzes how those differences help to create contrasts in the impact on consumption of housing as a component of personal wealth. The impacts of rates of home ownership, credit market characteristics, interest rates, and macroeconomic conditions are studied. Implications for monetary, fiscal, and other policies are discussed.
Publisher:
UNU-WIDER
Series:
WIDER Research Paper
Volume:
2007/27
Title:
Housing and Personal Wealth in a Global Context
Authors:
John Muellbauer
Publication date:
May 2007
ISSN Web:
1810-2611
ISBN Web:
9291909688
ISBN 13 Web:
9789291909681
Copyright holder:
© UNU-WIDER
Copyright year:
2007
Keywords:
housing, wealth, consumption, interest rates, monetary transmission
JEL:
E21, E40, R31
Project:
Personal Assets from a Global Perspective
Sponsor:
The governments of Denmark (Royal Ministry of Foreign Affairs), Finland (Ministry for Foreign Affairs), Norway (Royal Ministry of Foreign Affairs), Sweden (Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency-Sida) and the United Kingdom (Department for International Development).
Format:
online

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