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Journal Article

No Price Like Home: Global House Prices, 1870–2012

American Economic Review, Vol. 107, No. 2, 331-353.

Authors

  • Knoll
  • K.
  • Schularick
  • M.
  • Steger
  • T.

Publication Date

DOI

10.1257/aer.20150501

JEL Classification

C43 N10 N90 R31

Related Topics

Growth

Financial Markets

How have house prices evolved over the long run? This paper presents annual house prices for 14 advanced economies since 1870. We show that real house prices stayed constant from the nineteenth to the mid-twentieth century, but rose strongly and with substantial cross-country variation in the second half of the twentieth century. Land prices, not replacement costs, are the key to understanding the trajectory of house prices. Rising land prices explain about 80 percent of the global house price boom that has taken place since World War II. Our findings have implications for the evolution of wealth-to-income ratios, the growth effects of agglomeration, and the price elasticity of housing supply.

Kiel Institute Expert

  • Prof. Dr. Moritz Schularick
    President

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