Household Debt and Business Cycles Worldwide*
Princeton Public Schools · University of Chicago · +1 more institution
Abstract
Abstract An increase in the household debt to GDP ratio predicts lower GDP growth and higher unemployment in the medium run for an unbalanced panel of 30 countries from 1960 to 2012. Low mortgage spreads are associated with an increase in the household debt to GDP ratio and a decline in subsequent GDP growth, highlighting the importance of credit supply shocks. Economic forecasters systematically over-predict GDP growth at the end of household debt booms, suggesting an important role of flawed expectations formation. The negative relation between the change in household debt to GDP and subsequent output growth is stronger for countries with less flexible exchange rate regimes. We also uncover a global…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 143.86
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 101
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Economics
- Household debt
- Business cycle
- Monetary economics
- Debt
- Boom
- Real gross domestic product
- Debt-to-GDP ratio
- Decent work and economic growth