6533b82bfe1ef96bd128de90
RESEARCH PRODUCT
The Real Effect of Financial Crises in the European Transition Economies
Davide FurceriAleksandra Zdzienicka-durandsubject
CrisesFinancial CrisisOutput GrowthCEECsOutput GrowthFinancial CrisisCEECsJEL: G - Financial Economics/G.G1 - General Financial MarketsJEL: E - Macroeconomics and Monetary Economics/E.E6 - Macroeconomic Policy Macroeconomic Aspects of Public Finance and General Outlook[SHS.ECO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Economics and Financedescription
Working Paper GATE 2009-20; International audience; The aim of this work is to assess the impact of financial crises on output for 11 European transition economies (CEECs). The results suggest that financial crises have a significant and permanent effect, lowering long-term output by about 17 percent. The effect is more important in smaller countries, with relative higher dependence on external financing, and in which the banking sector noticed more important financial disequilibria. We also found that fiscal policy measures have been the most efficient tools in dealing with the crises, while the role of monetary policy instruments has been rather blinded. Exchange rate resulted to be more a propagator than a crises absorber, while the IMF credit has been found to have positive (but not significant) impact on growth performance. Finally, the effect for the CEECs is much bigger than in the EU advanced economies, for which we found that financial crises lowers long-term output only by 2 percent.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2010-04-29 |