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Book
A note on absolute priority rule violations, credit rationing, and efficiency
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Year: 1995 Publisher: Cleveland, Ohio Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland

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Book
The role of warrants in corporate reorganizations
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Year: 1995 Publisher: Cleveland, Ohio Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland

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Book
Bankruptcy rules and debt contracting: on the relative efficiency of absolute priority, proportionate priority, and first-come, first-served rules
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Year: 1994 Publisher: Cleveland, Ohio Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland

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Digital
The importance of bank seniority for relationship lending
Authors: ---
Year: 1998 Publisher: Basle

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Private finance


Digital
The (Mythical?: ) Housing Wealth Effect
Authors: --- ---
Year: 2009 Publisher: Cambridge, Mass National Bureau of Economic Research

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Models used to guide policy, as well as some empirical studies, suggest that the effect of housing wealth on consumption is large and greater than the wealth effect on consumption from stock holdings. Recent theoretical work, in contrast, argues that changes in housing wealth are offset by changes in housing consumption, meaning that unexpected shocks in housing wealth should have little effect on non-housing consumption. We reexamine the impact of housing wealth on non-housing consumption, employing the Case-Quigley-Shiller data on U.S. housing wealth that have been used in prior studies to estimate a large housing wealth effect. Existing empirical work fails to control for the fact that changes in housing wealth may be correlated with changes in expected permanent income, biasing the resulting estimates. Once we control for the endogeneity bias resulting from the correlation between housing wealth and permanent income, we find that housing wealth has a small and insignificant effect on consumption. Additional analysis of time-series results provides further support for that view.


Book
Anatomy of a fair-lending exam: the uses and limitations of statistics
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Year: 2000 Publisher: Washington, D.C. Federal Reserve Board

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Book
The importance of bank seniority for relationship lending.
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Year: 1998 Publisher: Basle Bank For International Settlements. Bis Working Paper Nr. 58

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Digital
The Housing Wealth Effect : The Crucial Roles of Demographics, Wealth Distribution and Wealth Shares
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Year: 2012 Publisher: Cambridge, Mass. National Bureau of Economic Research

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Current estimates of housing wealth effects vary widely. We consider the role of omitted variables suggested by economic theory that have been absent in a number of prior studies. Our estimates take into account age composition and wealth distribution (using poverty rates as a proxy), as well as wealth shares (how much of total wealth is comprised of housing vs. stock wealth). We exploit cross-state variation in housing, stock wealth and other variables in a newly assembled panel data set and find that the impact of housing on consumer spending depends crucially on age composition, poverty rates, and the housing wealth share. In particular, young people who are more likely to be credit-constrained, and older homeowners, likely to be “trading down” on their housing stock, experience the largest housing wealth effects, as suggested by theory. Also, as suggested by theory, housing wealth effects are higher in state-years with higher housing wealth shares, and in state-years with higher poverty rates (likely reflecting the greater importance of credit constraints for those observations). Taking these various factors into account implies huge variation over time and across states in the size of housing wealth effects.


Digital
The foreclosure-house price nexus: lessons from the 2007-2008 housing turmoil
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Year: 2008 Publisher: Cambridge, Mass. NBER

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Book
The (Mythical?) Housing Wealth Effect
Authors: --- --- ---
Year: 2009 Publisher: Cambridge, Mass. National Bureau of Economic Research

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Abstract

Models used to guide policy, as well as some empirical studies, suggest that the effect of housing wealth on consumption is large and greater than the wealth effect on consumption from stock holdings. Recent theoretical work, in contrast, argues that changes in housing wealth are offset by changes in housing consumption, meaning that unexpected shocks in housing wealth should have little effect on non-housing consumption. We reexamine the impact of housing wealth on non-housing consumption, employing the Case-Quigley-Shiller data on U.S. housing wealth that have been used in prior studies to estimate a large housing wealth effect. Existing empirical work fails to control for the fact that changes in housing wealth may be correlated with changes in expected permanent income, biasing the resulting estimates. Once we control for the endogeneity bias resulting from the correlation between housing wealth and permanent income, we find that housing wealth has a small and insignificant effect on consumption. Additional analysis of time-series results provides further support for that view.

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