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  5. Asset Price Keynesianism, Regional Imbalances and the Irish and Spanish Housing Booms and Busts
 
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Asset Price Keynesianism, Regional Imbalances and the Irish and Spanish Housing Booms and Busts

Author(s)
Norris, Michelle  
Byrne, M. (Michael)  
Uri
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/9710
Date Issued
2015-07
Date Available
2019-03-27T10:29:07Z
Abstract
Ireland and Spain were amongst the European countries which experienced the most severe economic and fiscal problems following the global financial crisis. The proximate causes of these economic crashes have been explored in-depth by researchers and governments, who have highlighted strong parallels between the policy, regulatory and economic factors which underpinned them. In both countries residential property price inflation increased dramatically from the late 1990s driven by increased availability of cheap mortgages but unusually was accompanied by marked growth in new house building. Thus, following the international credit crunch in 2008, a simultaneous contraction in both mortgage credit and house building occurred in Ireland and Spain, which precipitated a marked knock-on decline in the employment, tax revenue and consumer spending which the housing boom had underpinned. This article argues that the Irish and Spanish housing booms and busts are similar not just in terms of scale and proximate causes but also in terms of fundamental causes. In both countries the housing boom/bust cycle was underpinned by a suite of macroeconomic policies which aimed to use asset price growth to underpin rising demand and economic growth, or in other words achieve what Robert Brenner (2006) terms ‘asset-price Keynesianism’. This approach was particularly attractive to the Irish and Spanish governments because it enabled them to resolve historical legacies of industrial underdevelopment and regional imbalances by generating construction jobs in underdeveloped areas. As a result of the latter, local/regional governments in both countries played a key role in facilitating the implementation of this policy.
Type of Material
Journal Article
Publisher
Alexandrine Press
Journal
Built Environment
Volume
41
Issue
2
Start Page
205
End Page
221
Copyright (Published Version)
2015 Alexandrine Press
DOI
10.2148/benv.41.2.227
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/ie/
File(s)
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Ireland_and_spain_-_for_repository.docx

Size

92.58 KB

Format

Microsoft Word

Checksum (MD5)

a4da2fc3e39e8941355b3130dffe85d9

Owning collection
Social Policy, Social Work and Social Justice Research Collection

Item descriptive metadata is released under a CC-0 (public domain) license: https://creativecommons.org/public-domain/cc0/.
All other content is subject to copyright.

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