Historical evidence from major housing market shifts, such as the start of a boom or the onset of a bust, consistently points to a single, large, and abrupt price change as the primary trigger that moves the market into a new, self-sustaining trend.
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Price Shocks vs. PDC Shifts in Dynamic Models
Evaluating a Housing Market Model
Historical analysis of major housing market downturns frequently reveals a prolonged period of weakening prices, rather than a sharp crash immediately following one specific, large negative event. What is the most likely implication of this observation for a model that explains market busts as the result of a single price shock pushing the market past a critical tipping point on a static, S-shaped price dynamics curve?
Historical evidence from major housing market shifts, such as the start of a boom or the onset of a bust, consistently points to a single, large, and abrupt price change as the primary trigger that moves the market into a new, self-sustaining trend.
Critique of a Market Instability Model
Evaluating a Housing Market Model's Realism
A simplified economic model suggests that a housing market boom or bust is triggered when a single, large price change pushes the market past a critical tipping point. However, this model has limitations when compared to real-world data. Match each component of this discussion with its correct description.
A theoretical model proposes that a housing market crash is triggered by a single, large negative price shock that pushes the market past a critical 'tipping point'. However, historical data often shows a prolonged period of gradual price decline preceding a crash. This discrepancy suggests that the single-shock model is empirically ____.
An economist is evaluating a theoretical model which posits that a housing market boom or bust is triggered by a single, large price change that pushes the market past a critical tipping point. Arrange the following steps in the logical order the economist would follow to critique this model's real-world applicability.
Analyzing the 'Tipping Point' Theory of Market Crashes
Two economists are analyzing a recent housing market downturn.
- Economist A argues: "The downturn was triggered by a single, dramatic event—the central bank's unexpected 2% interest rate hike. This shock was large enough to push the market past a critical tipping point, initiating a self-perpetuating price decline."
- Economist B counters: "While the rate hike was a factor, historical data shows that major market shifts are rarely caused by one-off events. The downturn was more likely the culmination of several months of weakening fundamentals, such as gradually declining consumer confidence and slowly tightening lending standards."
Based on the typical empirical evidence regarding major market booms and busts, which economist's explanation is generally considered more representative of how these shifts occur in reality?