“…The root of the global economic and financial crisis of 2008-2009 is commonly associated with the rapid decline in real estate prices, following a prolonged boom. Since there exists a large literature on the impact of monetary policy on general real estate prices and vice versa (see for example, Del Negro and Otrok (2007), Bjørnland and Jacobsen (2010), Bjørnland and Jacobsen (2013), Rahal (2016), Simo-Kengne, Miller, Gupta, and Balcilar (2016), Marfatia, Gupta, and Cakan (2017)), Huber and Punzi (2018), Plakandaras, Gupta, Katrakilidis, and Wohar (2018), it is not surprising that there is now a revived interest in the long standing debate on whether and how monetary policy should respond to perceived deviations of real prices from fundamentals. Given the beliefs that asset price bubbles are difficult to detect and measure, and that interest rates are a blunt instrument to prick a bubble resulting in unintended collateral damages, the consensus view is that central banks should focus on stabilizing inflation and the output gap only (Bernanke and Gertler (1999); Bernanke and Gertler (2001); Kohn (2006)).…”