Abstract
Extant work on costs of financial instability focuses on fiscal costs and declines in aggregate GDP following banking crises. We estimate effects of banking and currency crises on consumption in 19 OECD countries, showing consumption plays an important role in the adjustment following a crisis, and effects are not captured solely by the impact of crises on standard consumption determinants, income and wealth. Additional effects, attributable to factors such as time-varying confidence, uncertainty and credit rationing, are aggravated by high and rising leverage, despite financial liberalisation easing liquidity constraints. High leverage implies that banking crises taking place now could have greater incidence than in the past. © 2006 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
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Barrell, R., Davis, E. P., & Pomerantz, O. (2006). Costs of financial instability, household-sector balance sheets and consumption. Journal of Financial Stability, 2(2), 194–216. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jfs.2006.05.001
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