Analyzing a Housing Market Shift
Based on a model where the market's price path is determined by the relationship between current prices and expected future prices, explain the mechanism that links the company's announcement to the observed fall in housing prices in the provided scenario.
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Introduction to Macroeconomics Course
Ch.8 Economic dynamics: Financial and environmental crises - The Economy 2.0 Macroeconomics @ CORE Econ
The Economy 2.0 Macroeconomics @ CORE Econ
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Figure 8.15: A Shift in the S-Shaped PDC
Increased Risk of Market Collapse from a Downward PDC Shift
Market Collapse to a Single Low-Price Equilibrium via a Major Downward PDC Shift
A housing market is in a stable, high-price equilibrium, as described by a model that relates current prices to expected future prices (the Price Dynamics Curve). Suddenly, a wave of negative economic forecasts leads to a widespread belief among buyers and sellers that future prices will be significantly lower than previously anticipated. According to this model, how does this change in sentiment directly trigger a market downturn?
Analyzing a Housing Market Shift
The Role of Expectations in Housing Market Downturns
A housing market, initially at a high-price stable equilibrium, experiences a sudden, widespread shift in sentiment towards pessimism about future values. According to the model where a curve represents the relationship between current and expected future prices, arrange the following events into the correct causal sequence that results in a market bust.
Explaining a Housing Market Bust Mechanism
In a housing market model where a curve represents the relationship between current and expected future prices, a widespread shift to pessimistic expectations will cause the market to move along the existing curve to a lower price point, without the curve itself shifting.
A housing market is modeled using a curve that relates current prices to expected future prices. In the context of a market bust triggered by a change in sentiment, match each component of the model's dynamics with its correct description.
A housing market is described by a model featuring an S-shaped curve that relates current prices to expected future prices. This model has two stable equilibria (one high-price, one low-price) and one unstable tipping point. If the market is initially at the high-price stable equilibrium and a widespread wave of pessimism about future values causes the entire curve to shift downwards, what is the most likely consequence for the market's underlying structure?
A housing market, which had been stable for years at a high price level, experiences a severe and prolonged crash. Following an initial sharp drop, prices fail to rebound and continue to decline until they stabilize at a very low level, showing no tendency to return to their previous highs. In a model that uses an S-shaped curve to represent the relationship between current prices and expected future prices, which of the following best explains this specific outcome?
Analyzing Two Housing Market Downturns