Search results for "financial crises"

showing 6 items of 6 documents

TESTING FOR CONTAGION: A CONDITIONAL CORRELATION ANALYSIS

2005

Abstract In this paper, we test for contagion within the East Asian region, contagion being defined as a significant increase in the degree of comovement between stock returns in different countries. For this purpose, we use a parameter stability test, and, following [Rigobon, R., 2003a. On the measurement of the international propagation of shocks: is the transmission stable?, Journal of International Economics], we control for three types of bias, resulting from heteroscedasticity, endogeneity and omitted variable, respectively. The null of interdependence against the alternative of contagion is then tested as an overidentifying restriction. Unlike other studies, our approach is based on …

Economics and EconometricsHeteroscedasticityContagionStability testFinancial economicsConditional correlationAsset marketOmitted-variable biascontagion; identification; heteroscedasticityheteroscedasticityEast asian regioncontagionCorrelation analysisEconometricsEconomicsjel:F3Contagion Financial Crises Conditional Correlationidentificationjel:F4EndogeneityFinancial criseFinanceStock (geology)
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Financial crises in Spain: lessons from the last 150 years

2012

Financial crises are not unique to current financial systems. Are crises alike? Have they become more frequent, longer lasting and more severe since the 20th century? What does history tell us? The objective of this paper is to study the financial crises that have occurred in Spain over the last 150 years. We consider different types of crises (banking, currency and stock market crises), together with all their possible combinations, estimate their frequency by period and measure their length and depth. The main conclusion we obtain is that Spanish crises have been more frequent than in the rest of the world and have been more severe and more complex since 1973, as the 2007 crisis is confir…

Economics and EconometricsHistoryHistoryCrisis cambiariasEspañaN20Stock market crisesBanking crisesjel:N2HistoriaEconomíaRest (finance)Financial historyfinancial crises currency banking stock market and debt crises Spanish banking history.FinanceCurrency crisesCrisis bancariasbusiness.industryHistoria financieraCurrencySpainjel:G18Stock marketCrisis bursátilesG01business
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Quantum macroeconomics: A tribute to Bernard Schmitt

2016

Bernard Schmitt, the founder of quantum macroeconomics, died on 26 March 2014. His legacy concerns the discovery of the logical laws of monetary macroeconomics and extends to the explanation of the origin and nature of economic and financial crises. Starting from a novel conception of bank money, he was able to show that economics is founded on true macroeconomic laws, which take the form of logical identities. This paper is a brief and necessarily incomplete introduction to the main themes of Schmitt's macroeconomic analysis. It ranges from the distinction between money and income that lies at the hearth of his theory of the circuit, to the investigation of inflation and unemployment as pa…

InflationMacroeconomicsMonetary economies of productionDemand depositMoney and bankingmedia_common.quotation_subjectKeynesian economicsTributeFinancial crisesInflationEconomíaUnemploymentSovereign debtUnemploymentEconomicsSovereign debtGeneral Economics Econometrics and FinanceMechanism (sociology)Quantum macroeconomicsmedia_commonCuadernos de Economía
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An anatomy of financial crises in Norway, 1830-2010

2014

Author's version of an article in the journal: Financial History Review. Also available from the publisher at: http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0968565013000279 On the basis of a novel dataset, the article investigates the anatomy of financial crises in Norway from 1830 to 2010. First, nine significant crises are identified. Second, the article examines spillover effects on the real economy. We find a clear but not symmetric relationship. Third, the article investigates key patterns in credit and money volumes. Major financial crises typically occurred after substantial money and credit expansion, causing financial instability.

MacroeconomicsFinanceHistoryfinancial crisesbusiness.industrycredit and moneyNorwayVDP::Social science: 200::Economics: 210VDP::Humanities: 000::History: 070Peer reviewreal economyEconomicsReal economybusinessFinance
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Labor Market Flexibility and Unemployment: New Empirical Evidence of Static and Dynamic Effects

2012

The aim of this paper is to analyze the relationship between labor market flexibility and unemployment outcomes. Using a panel of 97 countries from 1985 to 2008, the results of the paper suggest that improvements in labor market flexibility have a statistically and significant negative impact on unemployment outcomes (over unemployment, youth unemployment, and long-term unemployment). Among the different labor market flexibility indicators analyzed, hiring and firing regulations and hiring costs are found to have the strongest effect.

Western hemisphereEconomics and EconometricsLabour economicsYouth unemploymentmedia_common.quotation_subjectlabor market unemploymentInstitutional economicsPlanned economyFlexibility (personality)State ownershipUnemploymentEconomicsGeneral Earth and Planetary SciencesProduction (economics)Emerging marketsEmpirical evidenceConsumption Saving Production Employment and Investment: Other Mobility Unemployment and Vacancies: General Analysis Of Collective Decision-making [Financial crises;Cross country analysis;Labor markets;OECD;Unemployment;Labor market flexibility reforms labor market flexibility labor market institutions unemployment outcomes Macroeconomics]General Environmental ScienceCross country analysismedia_commonComparative Economic Studies
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CAPITAL FLOW BONANZAS AS A FUNDAMENTAL INGREDIENT IN SPAIN'S FINANCIAL CRISES, 1850-2015

2020

El trabajo analiza los mecanismos a través de los cuales los flujos de capital produjeron inestabilidad financiera en España durante un período de 165 años. Se estudia por qué y cómo las bonanzas de capital hacen que las crisis sean más probables y severas, y si su incidencia varía en función de los tipos de crisis (crisis cambiaria, bancaria y de deuda). Concluimos que la mayoría de ellas se produjeron en diferentes regímenes de política monetaria pero que se asociaron a bonanzas de capital en un marco regulatorio liberal, lo que contribuyó a una mayor probabilidad y a una mayor gravedad de las crisis. El análisis de los diferentes regímenes de política monetaria, las estructuras financier…

capital bonanzasfinancial crisesEconomics and EconometricsHistoryInequality060106 history of social sciencesmedia_common.quotation_subject05 social sciencesUNESCO::CIENCIAS ECONÓMICAS06 humanities and the artsMonetary economicsStandard of livingIngredient0502 economics and businessspainEconomics0601 history and archaeology050207 economicsCapital flowsProductivitymedia_commonRevista de Historia Económica / Journal of Iberian and Latin American Economic History
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