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Consumption in the Great Recession: The Financial Distress Channel

TLDR
This paper found that financial distress among U.S. households amplified the sensitivity of consumption to house-price shocks, and used a rich-estimated-dynamic model to measure the financial distress channel, and found that these two facts amplify the aggregate drop in consumption by 7 percent and 45 percent respectively.
Abstract
During the Great Recession, the collapse of consumption across the U.S. varied greatly but systematically with house-price declines. We find that financial distress among U.S. households amplified the sensitivity of consumption to house-price shocks. We uncover two essential facts: (1) the decline in house prices led to an increase in household financial distress prior to the decline in income during the recession, and (2) at the zip-code level, the prevalence of financial distress prior to the recession was positively correlated with house-price declines at the onset of the recession. Using a rich-estimated-dynamic model to measure the financial distress channel, we find that these two facts amplify the aggregate drop in consumption by 7 percent and 45 percent respectively.

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How Risky Is Australian Household Debt

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors consider how significant a risk household debt poses to consumption and suggest that banks appear resilient to a severe downturn, thanks to moderate loan-to-valuation ratios on residential mortgages and generally sound lending criteria.
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