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- Title
HIGH MORTGAGE RATES IN THE LOW COUNTRIES: WHAT HAPPENED IN THE SPRING OF 2009?
- Authors
Dijkstra, Mark A.; Randag, Fleur; Schinkefl, Maarten Pieter
- Abstract
Since the spring of 2009, Dutch mortgage rates have been structurally high, both in comparison to the rest of Europe and to funding costs. This article reviews the debate on possible causes, which are of two types: (1) the higher mortgage rates reflect higher funding costs, and (2) softer competition has allowed higher pricecost margins for mortgage providers. Detailed margin calculations based on an established cost formula reveal that, while funding costs have risen substantially since the financial crisis, they do not fully explain the high mortgage rates relative to very low base rates. Instead, there have been competition concerns in Dutch mortgage banking since the financial crisis, particularly a high market concentration of established banks, exit of several foreign challengers, a remarkable restriction of competition through price-leadership bans imposed by the European Commission on three of the four largest mortgage providers, and funding capacity constraints that in part have resulted from tightened banking regulation. We conclude that, while several of the developments discussed combined to create market conditions rife for margin increases through coordination, the European Commission's price leadership bans appear to have acted as a nucleus for the crystallization of high mortgage rates in the spring of 2009.
- Subjects
NETHERLANDS; MORTGAGES; MORTGAGE bank laws; MORTGAGE rates; GLOBAL Financial Crisis, 2008-2009; INDUSTRIAL concentration; BANKING laws; LAW
- Publication
Journal of Competition Law & Economics, 2014, Vol 10, Issue 4, p843
- ISSN
1744-6414
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1093/joclec/nhu031