Reserve Bank Of NZ Discussion Papers (12 Jul 2007)
Reserve Bank Of New Zealand Discussion Papers
The following Discussion Papers have been released by the Reserve Bank:
DP2007/10
Understanding the New Zealand
current account: A structural approach
Anella
Munro and Rishab Sethi
Abstract In this paper we use a
small open economy model to identify the causal factors that
drive New Zealand's current account. The model features
nonseparable preferences, habit in consumption, imperfect
capital mobility, permanent productivity shocks, fiscal
shocks and two foreign shocks to explore features that are
important in understanding the dynamics of the current
account. The results suggest that permanent technology
shocks and world cost of capital shocks account for the bulk
of variation in the current account at short horizons; at
longer horizons, external valuation shocks (reflecting terms
of trade and exchange rate developments) account for most of
the variance. Habit in consumption and a debt-sensitive risk
premium are features that improve overall model fit as
measured by posterior odds ratios. These features, and the
contribution of foreign and permanent technology shocks,
help to explain why the one shock present value model of the
current account fails to appropriately characterise the
dynamics of the New Zealand current account, as discussed in
Munro and Sethi (2006).
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DP2007/11
Credit constraints and
housing markets in New Zealand
Andrew Coleman
Abstract: The paper develops an overlapping generations
model incorporating a realistic depiction of the credit
constraints facing home buyers to explain why home
ownerships rates have declined in New Zealand since 1990
despite a significant relaxation of credit constraints. The
model focuses attention on the role of property investors in
the property market, and suggests changes in credit
constraints mainly affect the tenure decisions of individual
households, but not the aggregate level of house prices. The
model suggests the decline in real interest rates is likely
to be the cause of the rise in house prices and the decline
in home ownership rates since 1990.
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ENDS