Abstract

In this paper, we revisit the relationship between housing prices and consumption in China by using a continuous wavelet analysis. This method provides an insight into the dynamic nexus in both time and frequency domains. In general, Empirical results show that there is a positive relationship between the two series in China, although it varies across time and frequencies. First, we find that disposable income is the core factor which affects both consumption and housing prices in China. Second, housing prices have a weak wealth effect on consumption in most time. High housing ownership and proportion of housing asset in the total household asset lead to a wealth effect of housing prices on consumption. Third, in the long term, there is a significant wealth effect of housing prices on consumption, but it weakens after 2008, which implies that excessively high housing prices in recent years have partially constrained residents’ consumption. These findings have important implications for seeking housing market regulation and expanding domestic consumption decisions.

Highlights

  • This article explores the dynamic linkage between housing prices and resident consumption in China

  • We use a wavelet analysis to study the relationship between housing prices and consumption in China from 2000 to 2015

  • We find a positive relationship between the two series in China, it varies across time and frequencies

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Summary

Introduction

This article explores the dynamic linkage between housing prices and resident consumption in China. Tiwari et al [12] suggest that the wavelet method is the preferred tool for exploring macro financial relationships, especially when the objective is to detect instantaneous effects across time and frequencies. This empirical study reveals that the link between housing prices and consumption varies across time and frequencies. We find that both in short, medium and long terms, housing prices have a weak wealth effect on consumption, apart from a significant long-term wealth effects before 2008.

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