Assessing the Impact of Private Sector Balance Sheets Effects on Financial Crises: a comparison of Bayesian and information-theoretic measures of model uncertainty
This paper examines the intensity of financial crises during the 1990s with a view to informing crisis prevention and mitigation policies. We compare the performance of a full Bayesian and an information-theoretic approach in addressing the econometric problems posed by the lack of a unifying theoretical model, a large number of crisis indicators, and a number of additional data shortfalls. The results indicate that the probability and intensity of financial crises are heightened by corporate illiquidity and leverage, a lack of nonbank sources of financing, excessive domestic relative to foreign currency liquidity and a cutoff of capital inflows. The implications are that policy measures aimed at improving the operation and monitoring of the corporate and nonbank financial sectors could reduce crisis vulnerability
Year of publication: |
2004-08-11
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Authors: | Weeks, M. ; Godsill, S. ; Stone, M. |
Institutions: | Econometric Society |
Subject: | Model Uncertainty | Financial Crises | Bayesian Inference | AIC | Kullback Leibler | Model Averaging |
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Type of publication: | Book / Working Paper |
Notes: | The text is part of a series Econometric Society Latin American Meetings 2004 Number 162 |
Classification: | B41 - Economic Methodology ; C21 - Cross-Sectional Models; Spatial Models ; C23 - Models with Panel Data |
Source: |
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10005699629
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