Endogenous price bubbles in a multi-agent system of the housing market

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Abstract

Economic history shows a large number of boom-bust cycles, with the U.S. real estate market as one of the latest examples. Classical economic models have not been able to provide a full explanation for this type of market dynamics. Therefore, we analyze home prices in the U.S. using an alternative approach, a multi-agent complex system. Instead of the classical assumptions of agent rationality and market efficiency, agents in the model are heterogeneous, adaptive, and boundedly rational. We estimate the multi-agent system with historical house prices for the U.S. market. The model fits the data well and a deterministic version of the model can endogenously produce boom-and-bust cycles on the basis of the estimated coefficients. This implies that trading between agents themselves can create major price swings in absence of fundamental news. Copyright:

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Kouwenberg, R., & Zwinkels, R. C. J. (2015). Endogenous price bubbles in a multi-agent system of the housing market. PLoS ONE, 10(6). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0129070

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