Housing Equity Withdrawal, Property Bubbles and Consumption
Reamonn Lydon () and
Niall O'Hanlon
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Niall O'Hanlon: Central Statistics Office
No 05/RT/12, Research Technical Papers from Central Bank of Ireland
Abstract:
At the peak of the Irish property boom in the first decade of the 2000s, housing equity withdrawal, or \top-up" loans, accounted for one-third of residential mortgage loans issued. This collateral-based lending was typically issued at a significant discount to other forms of personal lending, often at tracker rates. Following the collapse of the Irish housing market, the value of top-up loans issued in 2011 was down 97 percent from 2006 - the peak year for this form of lending. This paper draws out some of the trends in housing equity withdrawal over the last decade, both in terms of the extent of lending that occurred and the reasons for borrowers taking out such loans. From a domestic demand perspective, the concern would be the extent to which this form of borrowing fed into domestic consumption and the longer-terms implications for Irish economic growth. In this context we show that equity withdrawal trends are strongly positively correlated with a number of demand measures, mainly related to spending on durables.
Date: 2012-08
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-ure
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (14)
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