Determinants of Financial Stress in Emerging Market Economies

Determinants of Financial Stress in Emerging Market Economies

Author: Cyn-Young Park

Publisher:

Published: 2018

Total Pages: 47

ISBN-13:

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The global financial crisis of 2008/09 illustrates how financial turmoil in advanced economies triggered severe financial stress in emerging markets. Previous studies showed the conditions and linkages through which financial stress is transmitted from advanced to emerging markets. This paper extends the existing literature on the use of financial stress index (FSI) in understanding this transmission. The computed financial stress index for twenty-five emerging markets captures key episodes of financial stress in emerging economies and appears to follow financial stress in advanced economies. Using panel regression, we find that advanced and emerging market FSI (excluding the country) significantly increases domestic emerging market FSI; global and domestic factors are both significant; and common regional factor appears significant for emerging Asia and emerging Europe, implying the vulnerability of both regions to regional financial contagion. (Results for the vector autoregression with blocked exogeneity to be included).


Determinants of Emerging Market Sovereign Bond Spreads

Determinants of Emerging Market Sovereign Bond Spreads

Author: Iva Petrova

Publisher: International Monetary Fund

Published: 2010-12-01

Total Pages: 27

ISBN-13: 1455210889

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This paper analyses the determimants of emerging market sovereign bond spreads by examining the short and long-run effects of fundamental (macroeconomic) and temporary (financial market) factors on these spreads. During the current global financial and economic crisis, sovereign bond spreads widened dramatically for both developed and emerging market economies. This deterioration has widely been attributed to rapidly growing public debts and balance sheet risks. Our results indicate that in the long run, fundamentals are significant determinants of emerging market sovereign bond spreads, while in the short run, financial volatility is a more important determinant of sperads than fundamentals indicators.


The Determinants of Cross-border Bank Flows to Emerging Markets

The Determinants of Cross-border Bank Flows to Emerging Markets

Author: Sabine Herrmann

Publisher:

Published: 2010

Total Pages: 50

ISBN-13:

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This paper studies the nature of spillover effects in bank lending flows from advanced to the emerging market economies and identifies specific channels through which such effects occur. Based on a gravity model we examine a panel data set on cross-border bank flows from 17 advanced to 28 emerging market economies in Asia, Latin America and central and eastern Europe from 1993 to 2008. The empirical analysis suggests that global as well as country specific factors are significant determinants of cross-border bank flows. Greater global risk aversion and expected financial market volatility seem to have been the most important factors behind the decrease in cross-border bank flows during the crisis of 2007-08. The decrease in cross-border loans to central and eastern Europe was more limited compared to Asia and Latin America, in large measure because of the higher degree of financial and monetary integration in Europe, and relatively sound banking systems in the region. These results are robust to various specification, sub-samples and econometric methodologies.


The Spillover Effects of the Global Crisison Economic Activity in Mena Emerging Market Countries

The Spillover Effects of the Global Crisison Economic Activity in Mena Emerging Market Countries

Author: Mr.Kenji Moriyama

Publisher: International Monetary Fund

Published: 2010-01-01

Total Pages: 22

ISBN-13: 1451961863

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The estimated spillover of the global crisis to emerging market (EM) economies in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) indicates that nearly two-thirds of the increased financial stress in MENA EM countries after the Lehman shock is attributable to direct or indirect spillovers of financial stress in advanced economies. Moreover, the estimated models suggest that the increased financial stress and slowdown in economic activity in advanced economies can explain about half of the drop in real GDP growth in MENA EM countries after the Lehman shock.


The Transmission of Financial Stress from Advanced to Emerging Economies

The Transmission of Financial Stress from Advanced to Emerging Economies

Author: Irina Tytell

Publisher: INTERNATIONAL MONETARY FUND

Published: 2009-06-01

Total Pages: 52

ISBN-13: 9781451872804

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This paper studies how financial stress is transmitted from advanced to emerging economies, using a new financial stress index for emerging economies. An episode of financial stress is defined as a period when the financial system's ability to intermediate may be impaired. Previous financial crises in advanced economies passed through strongly and rapidly to emerging economies. In line with this pattern, the unprecedented spike in financial stress in advanced economies elevated financial stress across emerging economies above levels seen during the Asian crisis, but with significant cross-country variation. The extent of pass-through of financial stress is related to the depth of financial linkages between advanced and emerging economies. The paper finds that higher current account and fiscal balances do little to insulate emerging economies from the transmission of financial stress in advanced economies. However, they may help dampen the impact on the real sector of emerging economies and help reestablish financial stability and foreign capital inflows once financial stress subsides.


Assessing Fiscal Stress

Assessing Fiscal Stress

Author: Iva Petrova

Publisher: International Monetary Fund

Published: 2011-05-01

Total Pages: 43

ISBN-13: 1455254312

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This paper develops a new index which provides early warning signals of fiscal sustainability problems for advanced and emerging economies. Unlike previous studies, the index assesses the determinants of fiscal stress periods, covering public debt default as well as near-default events. The fiscal stress index depends on a parsimonious set of fiscal indicators, aggregated using the approach proposed by Kaminsky, Lizondo and Reinhart (1998). The index is used to assess the build up of fiscal stress over time since the mid-1990s in advanced and emering economies. Fiscal stress has increased recently to record-high levels in advanced countries, reflecting raising solvency risks and financing needs. In emerging economies, risks are lower than in mature economies owing to sounder fiscal fundamentals, but fiscal stress remains higher than before the crisis.


Is it (Still) Mostly Fiscal? Determinants of Sovereign Spreads in Emerging Markets

Is it (Still) Mostly Fiscal? Determinants of Sovereign Spreads in Emerging Markets

Author: Mr.Amine Mati

Publisher: International Monetary Fund

Published: 2008-11-01

Total Pages: 25

ISBN-13: 1451871171

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Using a panel of 30 emerging market economies from 1997 to 2007, this paper investigates the determinants of country risk premiums as measured by sovereign bond spreads. Unlike previous studies, the results indicate that both fiscal and political factors matter for credit risk in emerging markets. Lower levels of political risk are associated with tighter spreads, while efforts at fiscal consolidation narrow credit spreads, especially in countries that experienced prior defaults. The composition of fiscal policy matters: spending on public investment contributes to lower spreads as long as the fiscal position remains sustainable and the fiscal deficit does not worsen.


Financial Stress and Economic Activity: Evidence from a New Worldwide Index

Financial Stress and Economic Activity: Evidence from a New Worldwide Index

Author: Hites Ahir

Publisher: International Monetary Fund

Published: 2023-10-20

Total Pages: 132

ISBN-13:

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This paper uses text analysis to construct a continuous financial stress index (FSI) for 110 countries over each quarter during the period 1967-2018. It relies on a computer algorithm along with human expert oversight and is thus easy to update. The new indicator has a larger country and time coverage and higher frequency than similar measures focusing on advanced economies. And it complements existing binary chronologies in that it can assess the severity of financial crises. We use the indicator to assess the impact of financial stress on the economy using both country- and firm-level data. Our main findings are fivefold: i) consistent with existing literature, we show an economically significant and persistent relationship between financial stress and output; ii) the effect is larger in emerging markets and developing economies and (iii) for higher levels of financial stress; iv) we deal with simultaneous causality by constructing a novel instrument—financial stress originating from other countries—using information from the text analysis, and show that, while there is clear evidence that financial stress harms economic activities, OLS estimates tend to overestimate the magnitude of this effect; (iv) we confirm the presence of an exogenous effect of financial stress through a difference-in-differences exercise and show that effects are larger for firms that are more financially constrained and less profitable.