My previous post on house price data from the BIS (How to spot a housing bubble before it bursts, October 15) scotched one part of the ‘No Bubble Downunder’ case: Australia is one of four countries where house prices are more than twice as high as they were in real terms in 1985 (see Figure 1).
Figure 1: The Bubble Contenders
There may be others too of course, since the BIS data doesn’t go back that far for many countries (and as several Twitter correspondents pointed out, there’s something suss about the Canadian data that implied there is no Loonie Bubble ; I’ll follow up on that issue in a future post). On the BIS data (which stops in 2012), only Belgium still had rising prices – though we all know that Australia’s and the UK’s prices are now on the rise again, the latter thanks to the UK’s ‘Help to Sell’ program (the equivalent of Australia’s now largely defunct First Home Vendors Grant). But on the BIS data, Australia, The Netherlands, Belgium and the UK (in increasing order) are arguably unburst housing bubbles.
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PS The Business Spectator article accidentally drops my correlation tables–or maybe they were considered too nerd-like. They are reproduced below:
Country | Start | End | Years | Correlation |
USA |
1977 |
2012 |
35.0 |
0.7 |
Spain |
1989 |
2012 |
22.9 |
0.68 |
Norway |
1993 |
2012 |
18.8 |
0.64 |
UK |
1970 |
2012 |
42.5 |
0.58 |
Australia |
1988 |
2012 |
24.3 |
0.56 |
Denmark |
1997 |
2012 |
15.0 |
0.51 |
Japan |
1986 |
2012 |
25.8 |
0.48 |
Netherlands |
1993 |
2012 |
19.0 |
0.46 |
Sweden |
1987 |
2012 |
24.8 |
0.43 |
Canada |
1982 |
2012 |
29.9 |
0.39 |
Belgium |
1983 |
2012 |
29.0 |
0.2 |
Italy |
1992 |
2012 |
20.5 |
0.13 |
Austria |
2001 |
2012 |
11.0 |
0.12 |
Germany |
2001 |
2012 |
10.8 |
0.08 |
Portugal |
1989 |
2012 |
22.9 |
0.02 |
And for countries where there was less than 10 years’ data:
Country | Start | End | Years | Correlation |
Greece |
2007 |
2012 |
4.8 |
0.61 |
Ireland |
2007 |
2012 |
4.8 |
0.49 |
France |
2008 |
2012 |
4.5 |
0.95 |