Abstract

PurposeHomeownership provides shelter and is a vital component of wealth, and house purchase signifies a lifetime achievement for many households. For South Africa confronted with social and structural challenges, homeownership by the low and lower middle-income household is pivotal for its structural transformation process. In spite of these potential benefits, research on the affordable housing market in the context of South Africa is limited. This study aims to contribute to this knowledge gap by answering the question “do changes in household income per capita have a symmetric or asymmetric effect on affordable house prices?”Design/methodology/approachA survey of the international literature on house prices and income revealed that linear modelling that assumes symmetric reaction of macroeconomic variables dominates the empirical strategy. This linearity assumption is restrictive and fails to capture possible asymmetric dynamics inherent in the housing market. The authors address this empirical limitation by using asymmetric non-linear autoregressive distributed lag models that can test and detect the existence of asymmetry in both the long and short run using data from 1985Q1 to 2016Q3.FindingsThe results revealed the presence of an asymmetric long-run relationship between affordable house prices and household income per capita. The estimated asymmetric long-run coefficients of logIncome[+] and logIncome[−] are 1.080 and −4.354, respectively, implying that a 1% increase/decrease in household income per capita induces a 1.08% rise/4.35% decline in affordable house prices everything being equal. The positive increase in affordable house prices creates wealth, helps low and middle-income household climb the property ladder and can reduce inequality, which provides support for the country’s structural transformation process. Conversely, a decline in affordable house prices tends to reduce wealth and widen inequality.Practical implicationsThis paper recommends both supply- and demand-side policies to support affordable housing development. Supply-side stimulants should include incentives to attract developers to affordable markets such as municipal serviced land and tax credit. Demand-side policy should focus on asset-based welfare policy; for example, the current Finance Linked Income Subsidy Programme (FLISP). Efficient management and coordination of the FLISP are essential to enhance the affordability of first-time buyers. Given the enormous size of the affordable property market, the practice of mortgage securitization by financial institutions should be monitored, as a persistent decline in income can trigger a systemic risk to the economy.Social implicationsThe study results illustrate the importance of homeownership by low- and middle-income households and that the development of the affordable market segment can boost wealth creation and reduce residential segregation. This, in turn, provides support to the country’s structural transformation process.Originality/valueThe affordable housing market in South Africa is of strategic importance to the economy, accounting for 71.4% of all residential properties. Homeownership by low and lower middle-income households creates wealth, reduces wealth inequality and improves revenue collection for local governments. This paper contributes to the empirical literature by modelling the asymmetric behaviour of affordable house prices to changes in household income per capita and other macroeconomic fundamentals. Based on available evidence, this is the first attempt to examine the dynamic asymmetry between affordable house prices and household income per capita in South Africa.

Highlights

  • Housing consumption provides shelter and is an important component of wealth for households in advanced economies such as the United Kingdom, USA and Australia (Al-Masum and Lee, 2019; Campbell and Cocco, 2007)

  • This study examines the nexus between affordable house prices and household per capita income while controlling for the effect of mortgage interest rate, Consumer price inflation (CPI) and the index of the number of building plans passed

  • The study uses the asymmetric cointegration technique, a nonlinear autoregressive distributed lag (NARDL) model that allows the modelling of Understanding possible asymmetric effects in both the long and short run

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Summary

Introduction

Housing consumption provides shelter and is an important component of wealth for households in advanced economies such as the United Kingdom, USA and Australia (Al-Masum and Lee, 2019; Campbell and Cocco, 2007). In South Africa, the share of home loans to gross loans and advances grew from ZAR923bn in 2017 to ZAR953bn in 2018, representing a growth of 3.3% (SARB, 2018). This translates into year-on-year house price index growth of 13.9% for the affordable housing market segment versus 4.9% for the luxury housing band (PropertyWheel, 2018) and the rapid growth is attributed to the zero transfer duties on properties valued below 1m rands (Delmendo, 2020). In spite of these important wealth effects on low-income households and the South Africa economy, the nexus between affordable house prices and economic fundamentals such as household income per capita has received little empirical attention. This study seeks to contribute to this knowledge gap by answering the question “do changes in household income per capita have a symmetric or asymmetric effect on affordable house prices?”

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