Karl E. Case
Encyclopedia
Karl Case is Professor of Economics
Principles of Economics
Principles of Economics is a book by economist Carl Menger which is credited with the founding of the Austrian School of economics...

 Emeritus at Wellesley College where he held the Coman and Hepburn Chair in Economics and taught for 34 years. He is a currently a Senior Fellow at the Joint Center for Housing Studies at Harvard University and was recently elected President of the Boston Economic Club. Professor Case is also a founding partner in the real estate research firm of Fiserv Case Shiller Weiss, Inc. which created the S&P Case Shiller Index of home prices. He serves as a member of the Board of Directors of the Depositors Insurance Fund of Massachusetts . He is a member of the Standard and Poor’s Index Advisory Committee, the Academic Advisory Board of the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston and the Board of Advisors of the Rappaport Institute for Greater Boston at Harvard University. He has served as a member of the Boards of Directors of the Mortgage Guaranty Insurance Corporation (MGIC), Century Bank, The Lincoln Institute of Land Policy
Lincoln Institute of Land Policy
The Lincoln Institute of Land Policy is a think tank based in Cambridge, Massachusetts that focuses on the use, taxation, and regulation of land. It conducts research and policy evaluations, holds conferences, provides education and training, supports demonstration projects, and publishes books and...

, and the American Real Estate and Urban Economics Association. He was also an Associate Editor of The Journal of Economic Perspectives and The Journal of Economics Education.

Professor Case received his B.A. from Miami University
Miami University
Miami University is a coeducational public research university located in Oxford, Ohio, United States. Founded in 1809, it is the 10th oldest public university in the United States and the second oldest university in Ohio, founded four years after Ohio University. In its 2012 edition, U.S...

 in 1968 and spent three years on active duty in the Army including a tour in Vietnam . He received a Ph.D. in Economics from Harvard University
Harvard University
Harvard University is a private Ivy League university located in Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States, established in 1636 by the Massachusetts legislature. Harvard is the oldest institution of higher learning in the United States and the first corporation chartered in the country...

 in 1977. At Harvard University, he served as Head Tutor (Director of Undergraduate Studies) and won the Allyn Young Teaching Prize.

His research has been in the areas of real estate, housing, and public finance
Public finance
Public finance is the revenue and expenditure of public authoritiesThe purview of public finance is considered to be threefold: governmental effects on efficient allocation of resources, distribution of income, and macroeconomic stabilization.-Overview:The proper role of government provides a...

. He is the author of numerous articles and studies on boom and bust
Boom and bust
A credit boom-bust cycle is an episode characterized by a sustained increase in several economics indicators followed by a sharp and rapid contraction. Commonly the boom is driven by a rapid expansion of credit to the private sector accompanied with rising prices of commodities and stock market index...

 real estate cycles, and is author or co-author of five books including Principles of Economics (1986), Economics and Tax Policy (1986) and Property Taxation: The Need for Reform (1978). Principles of Economics, a basic economics
Principles of Economics
Principles of Economics is a book by economist Carl Menger which is credited with the founding of the Austrian School of economics...

 text co-authored with Ray C. Fair and Sharon Oster
Sharon Oster
Sharon Oster is Frederic D. Wolfe Professor of Management and Entrepreneurship at Yale School of Management. She is widely known as an economist focusing on business strategy and non-profit organization management. Sharon lives in New Haven, Connecticut, with her husband Ray Fair, a professor at...

, first published in 1989, is in its ninth edition and is used at more than 500 colleges and universities.

Case’s research on housing markets and prices began with a New England Economic Review article published in 1986 entitled “The Market for Single Family Homes in Boston: 1979-1985.” In that paper Professor Case constructed a crude “repeat sales” index to isolate appreciation from mix effects in measuring changes in house values. The model presented in that paper showed that fundamentals explained only a small part of home price movements in the Northeast between 1979 and 1985. The paper conjectured that the region had experienced a home price bubble.

In 1985, Case met Yale University
Yale University
Yale University is a private, Ivy League university located in New Haven, Connecticut, United States. Founded in 1701 in the Colony of Connecticut, the university is the third-oldest institution of higher education in the United States...

 economist Robert Shiller
Robert Shiller
Robert James "Bob" Shiller is an American economist, academic, and best-selling author. He currently serves as the Arthur M. Okun Professor of Economics at Yale University and is a Fellow at the Yale International Center for Finance, Yale School of Management...

, and they started out on a joint venture that would lead to over a dozen coauthored papers and essays. The earliest work by Case and Shiller (Case and Shiller 1987, 1989) included a methodological paper detailing a more refined version of the repeat sales price index and their most cited work, “The Efficiency of the Market for Single Family Homes,” which appeared in the American Economic Review
American Economic Review
The American Economic Review is a peer-reviewed academic journal of economics publishing seven issues annually by the American Economic Association. First published in 1911, it is considered one of the most prestigious journals in the field. The current editor-in-chief is Penny Goldberg . The...

 in 1989. The latter paper presented weak form efficiency tests and found strong evidence of inertia in house prices. It also showed that over the cycle, simple decision rules would with near certainty bring excess profits. This was the first empirical paper on housing bubbles.

In 1991 along with Alan Weiss, they started a firm called Case Shiller Weiss Inc. and began producing on a regular basis the Case Shiller Index, now a well known and often cited index of house prices. The indexes are available at the zip code level in more than 90 Metro areas. Case Shiller Weiss was acquired by Fiserv in 2003, which continues to produce the indexes. The indexes for 20 of the metropolitan areas are licensed to Standard and Poor’s which releases the Case-Shiller index
Case-Shiller index
The Standard & Poor's Case–Shiller Home Price Indices are constant-quality house price indices for the United States. There are multiple Case–Shiller home price indices: A national home price index, a 20-city composite index, a 10-city composite index, and twenty individual metro area...

 on a monthly basis.

Following up on earlier research, Case and Shiller published an article in the Journal of the American Real Estate and Urban Economics Assocation (Case and Shiller 1990), which presented strong form tests showing the housing market was forecastable. In 1988, they responded to a booming housing market in California by developing a survey of the expectations and attitudes of homebuyers in four cities: San Francisco, Anaheim (Orange County, CA), Milwaukee, and Boston. The survey showed that home buyers were knowledgeable about current conditions, they saw little or no risk in the housing market, they had very positive price expectations, they thought of housing as an investment, and they indicated they would hold out in a down market. In 2003, Case and Shiller redid the same survey and have repeated it every year since. Case and Shiller also wrote a series of articles which proposed the establishment of futures and options markets in real estate (Case and Shiller 1993).

Case wrote several papers which described the consequences of housing price booms and busts for regional economies and the distribution of income and wealth (Case and Cook 1989; Case 1990,1991, and 1992).

The debate continues about who anticipated the ultimate collapse of the housing market. Case and Shiller were among the first to describe the risks. They were writing about housing bubbles in regional markets in the mid 1980s. The question they were investigating was how do housing price booms unwind? Do they gradually deflate or do they burst?

In 1999, Professor Case wrote a paper for the Brookings Panel entitled “Real Estate and the Macroeconomy.” The topic was suggested by William Brainard of The Brookings Institution who was very worried about the risks posed by a house price bubble. In that paper Case wrote:
Three concerns remain: the absence of any way to fully diversify around or to hedge market risk; the dramatic recent increase in the size and volume of the "sub-prime market;" and a substantial exposure of the Federal Government to catastrophic risk.
By far the bulk of losses suffered by holders and insurers and guarantors of mortgage paper in the past have been due to regional declines in house prices (Case and Shiller [1996]). The simple fact is that delinquencies become defaults and losses only when collateral is insufficient to cover the debt. The losses incurred in Texas, New England and California between 1985 and 1993 as the result of collateral shortfall dwarf the losses in the rest of the country due to changes in borrower economic circumstances. In the current economic climate, with home prices rising in every region of the country, variations in borrower characteristics such as credit scores explain most of the variation in default and foreclosure. If the housing market were to suffer a 20 percent decline, default rates and losses would far exceed the losses forecast by the most sophisticated credit scoring models in the industry.
This worry is to some extent heightened by the dramatic increase in sub prime high LTV lending of the last few years. While hard data on the size of the B&C market is hard to come by, trade publications such as Inside Mortgage Finance, Inside B&C Lending and National Mortgage News suggest that about 12 percent of current originations fit the description. A conservative estimate puts the currently serviced portfolio at about $500 billion. Seasoned sub-prime paper exhibits default rates as much as five times higher than traditional high LTV mortgages. While this risk is priced to some extent, it should be noted that these default rates are being observed in a rising house price environment. Should house prices fall, default rates will surely rise substantially.
Finally, the Congress has become increasingly aware of the explicit or implicit liability of the Federal Government for losses sustained on portfolios held by Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, Ginnie Mae, the FHA and the VA. Indeed the government has some liability for more than half the nation's mortgage portfolio. To be sure, the Treasury is protected by owners equity, securitizations, mortgage insurance, and OFHEO imposed risk-based capital requirements (based on severe stress tests). Nevertheless, there is substantial government exposure in the event of a sharp drop in real estate prices, and current debate about the proper role of the government in financial markets is an interesting and important one.(Case 2000).”


In more recent years, Case has published papers on the wealth effect of home price increases with Robert Shiller and John Quigley at The University of California in Berkeley.
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