In this era of cheap money, what once might have looked like a housing bubble might just be the new normal

It’s hard to disagree with the New Zealand government’s recent assessment that the country’s runaway housing market has moved from mere boom to a bubble that endangers the whole economy. Prices rose a staggering 23% over the past year, putting home ownership way beyond most people not already on the fabled ladder – younger, first-time buyers especially. If it walks like a bubble and talks like a bubble, then it must be a bubble, right?

The only problem is that bubbles might not be what they used to be. House prices are being steadily inflated in many other developed economies such as the US and UK. In Australia, prices rose 2.8% in March, the fastest monthly growth for 33 years. But governments are in no hurry to copy Jacinda Ardern’s canary in the coalmine moment, as the renowned Société Générale economist and market sceptic Albert Edwards has dubbed it, and instruct central banks to make dampening prices part of monetary policy.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

French Open women’s singles final: Iga Swiatek v Sofia Kenin – live!

Live updates from the women’s final at Roland Garros Polar opposites offering…

Bard: how Google’s chatbot gave me a comedy of errors

It may be connected to the internet, but this AI tool seems…

Covid has hit ‘critical’ stage in England, research finds

Dramatic increase in recorded cases across country, with infection rate rising fastest…

Alabama band Jeff Cook

jeff cook alabama