What Do 12 Billion Card Transactions Say About House Prices and Consumption? - Knut Are Aastveit (Norges Bank)
Wednesday 11 February 2026, 2:00pm to 3:00pm
Venue
CHC - Charles Carter A15 - View MapOpen to
All Lancaster University (non-partner) students, Postgraduates, Staff, UndergraduatesRegistration
Registration not required - just turn upEvent Details
Economics Research Seminar
Abstract: We study how changes in housing wealth affect household spending using administrative and granular, de-identified data on debit card payments and e-invoices for the near full population of Norway. We focus on the 2014 oil-price collapse, which created sharp regional variation in house prices. Comparing government workers in oil and non-oil regions, we estimate a three-year marginal propensity to spend (MPX) of about 3.6 cents per dollar. The response is highly concentrated in durables, home improvements, furnishings, and vehicles, and primarily driven by a reduction in the uptake of credit backed by home equity. The local MPX (L-MPX), the share of the total spending response accruing to locally produced goods and services, stands for roughly 80% of the consumption decline. Additional findings highlight both collateral and wealth effects as key channels linking housing wealth to consumption, and document that household balance-sheet heterogeneity shapes the propagation of housing-wealth shock.
Speaker
Norges Bank
Research interests in empirical macroeconomics, monetary policy, housing market, oil market, time-series econometrics, Bayesian statistics and forecasting
Contact Details
| Name | Stefano Fasani |