Evaluating Policy Responses to a Housing Market Shock
Imagine you are an economic advisor in a city where the housing market has two potential stable price levels: one high and one low. The market is currently at the high-price level. A large, unexpected negative shock has just occurred, threatening to push prices below the critical 'tipping point' that would lead to a collapse to the low-price equilibrium. Propose and justify two different policy interventions the city government could implement to prevent this collapse. For each policy, evaluate its potential effectiveness and discuss one significant potential drawback or unintended consequence.
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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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Evaluation in Bloom's Taxonomy
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Consider a housing market where prices are currently stable at a high level. This market is characterized by a dynamic where small price deviations tend to correct themselves, but there is also a critical lower price threshold. If prices fall below this threshold, they will continue to drop until they reach a new, much lower stable price level. Suppose a major local employer unexpectedly shuts down, causing a significant, one-time drop in housing demand and pushing prices just below this critical threshold. What is the most likely long-term outcome for housing prices in this market?
Analyzing a Housing Market Downturn
In a housing market characterized by both a stable high-price equilibrium and a stable low-price equilibrium, any unexpected decrease in housing demand will inevitably cause prices to collapse to the low-price equilibrium.
Explaining a Housing Market Collapse
A housing market, characterized by both a high and a low stable price level, is initially at the high-price equilibrium. Following a major negative economic event, the market collapses to the low-price equilibrium. Arrange the following events in the correct chronological order to describe this process.
Evaluating Policy Responses to a Housing Market Shock
Match each market state or event with its correct description in the context of a market that can shift between a high-price and a low-price equilibrium.
In a market with both a high and a low stable price level, a large negative shock can push prices below a critical threshold, known as the __________, causing a self-reinforcing collapse to the lower price level.
Analyzing Market Responses to Economic Shocks
A city's housing market is characterized by a structure where prices tend to settle at either a stable high level or a stable low level. The market is currently at the high-price level. Which of the following scenarios is most likely to cause a permanent shift to the stable low-price level?