Abstract: We use the dynamic Gordon-growth model to decompose the
rent-price ratio for owner-occupied housing in the U.S., four Census
regions, and twenty-three metropolitan areas into three components:
The expected present value of real rental growth, real interest rates,
and future housing premia. We use these components to decompose the
trend and variance in rent-price ratios for 1975-2005, for an early
sub-sample (1975-1996), and for the recent housing boom (1997-2005).
We have three main findings. First, variation in expected future real
rents accounts for a small share of variation in our sample rent-price
ratios; variation in real interest rates and housing premia account
for most of the variability. Second, expected future real rates and
housing premia were so strongly negatively correlated prior to 1997
that changes to real interest rates did not affect the rent-price
ratio. After 1997, rates and premia have been positively correlated,
and the decline in the rent-price ratio that has occurred in almost
every geographic area in our sample since 1997 reflects both declining
real rates and declining premia. Third, we show that in the recent
housing boom, 65 percent of the decline in the aggregate rent-price
ratio is due to a declining housing premium.
Keywords: Rent-price ratio, house price, housing rents, interest rate
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