Temporal causality between house prices and output in the US: A bootstrap rolling-window approach

被引:71
|
作者
Nyakabawo, Wendy [1 ]
Miller, Stephen M. [2 ]
Balcilar, Mehmet [1 ,3 ]
Das, Sonali [4 ,5 ]
Gupta, Rangan [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Pretoria, Dept Econ, ZA-0002 Pretoria, South Africa
[2] Univ Nevada, Dept Econ, Las Vegas, NV 89154 USA
[3] Eastern Mediterranean Univ, Dept Econ, Famagusta, Northern Cyprus, Turkey
[4] CSIR Modelling & Digital Sci, Adv Math Modelling, ZA-0001 Pretoria, South Africa
[5] Nelson Mandela Metropolitan Univ, Dept Stat, ZA-6031 Port Elizabeth, South Africa
关键词
Real house price; Real GDP per capita; Bootstrap; Time-varying causality; VECTOR AUTOREGRESSIONS; STATISTICAL-INFERENCE; PARAMETER INSTABILITY; STRUCTURAL-CHANGE; MONETARY-POLICY; UNIT-ROOT; TESTS; CONSUMPTION; SIZE; REGRESSIONS;
D O I
10.1016/j.najef.2015.03.001
中图分类号
F8 [财政、金融];
学科分类号
0202 ;
摘要
This paper examines the causal relationships between the real house price index and real GDP per capita in the US, using the bootstrap Granger (temporal) non-causality test and a fixed-size rolling-window estimation approach. We use quarterly time-series data on the real house price index and real GDP per capita, covering the period 1963:Q1 to 2012:Q2. The full-sample bootstrap non-Granger causality test result suggests the existence of a unidirectional causality running from the real house price index to real GDP per capita. A wide variety of tests of parameter constancy used to examine the stability of the estimated vector autoregressive models indicate short- and long-run instability. This suggests that we cannot rely on the full-sample causality tests and, hence, this warrants a time-varying (bootstrap) rolling-window approach to examine the causal relationship between these two variables. Using a rolling window size of 28 quarters, we find that while causality from the real house price to real GDP per capita occurs frequently, significant, but less frequent, evidence of real GDP per capita causing the real house price also occurs. These results imply that while the real house price leads real GDP per capita, in general (both during expansions and recessions), significant feedbacks also exist from real GDP per capita to the real house price. (C) 2015 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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页码:55 / 73
页数:19
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