In the last few years there have been many comments made in the media about
the Irish housing market boom. This paper focuses on two of these comments
. The first comment is that some economists have suggested that a speculati
ve bubble might be present in Irish house prices. The second comment is tha
t some housing market analysts have asked whether a crash similar to what h
appened in the British housing market in the late 1980s would occur in Irel
and. Many of these analysts suggest that it is highly unlikely that a simil
ar slump would occur in the Irish housing market. Given that bubbles have a
habit of bursting one might think that these remarks are contradictory. We
reconcile these two comments using regime-switching models of real secondh
and house prices in Britain and Ireland. The models are estimated and teste
d to explore whether speculative bubbles, fads or just fundamentals drive h
ouse prices. Our main findings suggest that there was a speculative bubble
in Britain in the late 1980s and in Ireland in the late 1990s. We estimate
that the probability of a crash in Britain reached its highest value of abo
ut 5 per cent in the last few quarters of 1989. We also estimate the probab
ility of a crash in the Irish housing market to have increased to around 2
per cent by the end of 1998.