Housing is NOT ONLY the Business Cycle: A Luxemburg-Kalecki External Market Empirical Investigation for the United States

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dc.contributor.author Pérez-Montiel, José
dc.contributor.author Pariboni, Riccardo
dc.date.accessioned 2024-01-17T08:12:26Z
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/11201/163767
dc.description.abstract We study the residential investment-economic activity nexus in the United States during the period 1960-2020. We find evidence of symmetric and asymmetric frequency-domain Granger causality running unidirectionally from residential investment (RES) to output. This unidirectional causal relationship is both permanent and transitory: transitory shocks in RES have transitory effects on GDP, while permanent shocks in RES have permanent effects on GDP. Our results validate the hypothesis of Fiebiger [2018. 'Semi Autonomous Household Expenditures as the Causa Causans of Postwar US Business Cycles: The Stability and Instability of Luxemburg-Type External Markets.' Cambridge Journal of Economics 42 (1): 155-175] and Fiebiger and Lavoie [2019. 'Trend and Business Cycles with External Markets: Non-Capacity Generating Semi-Autonomous Expenditures and Effective Demand.' Metroeconomica 70 (2): 247-262], who state that housing investment in the US can be analogous to a LuxemburgKalecki external market. Our findings can also be read through the lenses of the recent autonomous demand-led growth literature. In particular, we single out a specific component of autonomous demand and describe its prominent role in the US variety of capitalism. Thus, we conclude that residential investment, despite constituting a small overall share of GDP, is not only the cycle but is also the trend of the US economy
dc.format application/pdf
dc.relation.isformatof https://doi.org/10.1080/09538259.2020.1859718
dc.relation.ispartof Review of Political Economy, 2022, vol. 34, num. 1, p. 1-22
dc.rights , 2022
dc.subject.classification 33 - Economia
dc.subject.other 33 - Economics. Economic science
dc.title Housing is NOT ONLY the Business Cycle: A Luxemburg-Kalecki External Market Empirical Investigation for the United States
dc.type info:eu-repo/semantics/article
dc.date.updated 2024-01-17T08:12:27Z
dc.date.embargoEndDate info:eu-repo/date/embargoEnd/2100-01-01
dc.embargo 2100-01-01
dc.rights.accessRights info:eu-repo/semantics/embargoedAccess
dc.identifier.doi https://doi.org/10.1080/09538259.2020.1859718


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