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Financial crises Dr Katarzyna Sum International monetary system Financial crisis- definition Powerful shocks within the financial system which trigger a decrease or a deepening of the already ongoing production decrease Stock market crunches (1) Stock market crunches are relatively rare but their occurrence affects seriously the economy The source of a stock market crunch is usually a speculative bubble The optimism of investors drives the emergence of a speculative bubble Stock market crunches (2) Speculative bubbles emerge on the base of rational expectations Initially investors expect that the positive trend concerning e.g. a productivity increase will go on This happened for example during Dot Com crisis Stock market crunches (3) Behavioural finance can explain stock market crunches Small investors just follow the trend without qny rational economic analysis Large investors can predict the burst of a speculative bubble but they are usually unwilling ton withdraw their funds due to competitory pressures Stock market crunches (4) Once the speculative bubble burst it affects majorly investor who purchased stock by borrowing money from banks This was e.g. the source of the Japanese stock market crisis in the 90-ties The Dot Com crisis was much softer since investors financed their purchases via own capital Banking crises (1) Banks play a prominent role in financing economic activity The willingness of banks to grant loan depends largely on the economic cycle and the net value of enterprises In times of economic recession banks lack of objective information concerning the situation of the enterprises Banking crises (2) Banks know that enterprises in times of recessions need the funds to maintain liquidity instead of financing production This situation creates moral hazard- enterprises will require loans even if they can not pay them back Since banks know that they are forced to negative selection of companies requiring loans Banks raise the risk premium and hence the interest on granted loans As an effect liable companies limit their loan requirements, only companies who want to support their liquidity require loans Banking crises (3) Due to lending money to unreliable companies banks have to face toxic debt This can seriously affect the solvency of the banks The risk of the occurrence of financial crisis is the greater the larger the preceding credit expansion is Banking crises can also occur due to a disadvantageous change of the economic situation e.g the Norwegian banking crisis in the 80-ties was due to of an oil price decrease Currency crises (1) Currency crises occur if the financial markets participants start to mistrust a specific currency and subsequently withdraw their funds and the central banks are not able to counteract this tendency Currency crises (2) Currency crises can bbe grouped into three generations First generation- Krugman Second generation- Obstfeld Third generation- eclectic model The first generation of currency crises (1) The Krugman model Internal reasons for the outbreak of the crisis The reason of the currency crisis is inadequate economic policy especially concerning the fiscal situation The first generation of currency crises crises (2) Lax fiscal policy the budget deficit is financed by the central bank inflation the internal unequilibrium can not be reconciled with the fixed exchange rate Fiscla expansion increasing internal demand for imports +inflation balance of payment deficit devaulation pressure decrease of reserves speculative attack currency crisis The first generation of currency crises crises (3) Currency crises in the 80-ties Latin American countries (Argentina, Chile) This were usually emerging economies who had to cope with high inflation, fiscal deficit and fixed exchange rates The first generation of currency crises crises (4) Low level of foreign currency reserves Capital flow liberalisation+ lack of banking regulation lack of control over excess money supply Additional contsraint- high level of foreign loans to latin Amertican Countries insolvency The second generation of currency crises (1) The Obstfeld model The main reason for the crisis are speculative attacks Especially fixed or intermediate exchange rate regimes are prone to this type of currency crises The second generation of currency crises (2) The crisis occurs in economies with good economic policy Countries with high levels of foreign reserves External reasons for the crisis The second generation of currency crises (3) Second generation crises occurred in the 90-ties E.g. the ERM crisis Restructuring of the German economy inflationary pressure in Germany strict monetray policy incraesed interest rates overvaluation of the DM Other economies within the ERM system raised the intsrest rates as well to maintain the exchange rate parity The second generation of currency crises (4) Speculative attack on the GBP- the only economy that did not increase the interest rate devaluation of GBP This triggered speculative attacks on all the currencies within the ERM which were related to the DM As a consequence all countries who participated in the ERM were forced the devalue their currencies The third generation of currency crises (1) An eclectic model describes the third generation crises The theory was a reaction to the currency crises which occurred in emerging economies at the end of the 90ties A characteristic feature was the fact that the economies hit by the crisis had fixed exchange rates The crisis hit well performing, promising economies (Malaysia, Indonesia, South Korea) The third generation of currency crises (2) Microeconomic reasons for the crisis- risky investments undertaken by banks and companies Macroeconomic reasons- insufficient competiveness of the economy, lack of financial supervision Underdeveloped financial markets external funding of investments Foreign investors expected large productivity increases and when their expectations were not met they withdrew their funds The elements of third generation crises Moral hazard Too big to fail The investments financed by banks loans were concentrated Twin crises Banking crises and currency crises simultaneously This can occur if the banking sector has a large foreign debt Especially a currency mismatch can exacerbate an excessive foreign debt The elements of third generation crises Herding effects can cause the outflow of foreign capital The domino effect can cause international contagion Examples of third generation crises Emerging economies in south Asia faced currency crises at the end of the nineties Their banking sectors had large foreign debt These counties had costly production and underdeveloped financial markets Additionally the appreciation of USD caused the outflow of capital and subsequently the collapse of domestic exchange rates References A. Sławiński, Rynki finansowe, PWE, Warszawa 2006 P. Krugman, M.Obstfeld, International economics: theory and policy, Pearson, Addison Wesley, Boston 2009, J. A. Frankel, G. Saravelos, Are Leading Indicators of Financial Crises Useful for Assessing Country Vulnerability? Evidence from the 2008-09 Global Crisis, NBER Working Paper No. 16047, Cambridge 2010, J. Aizenman, Financial Crisis and the Paradox of Under- and Over-Regulation, NBER Working Paper No. 15018, Cambridge 2009, J. B. Taylor, The Financial Crisis and the Policy Responses: An Empirical Analysis of What Went Wrong, NBER Working Paper No. 14631, Cambridge 2009, C. M. Reinhart, K. S. Rogoff, From Financial Crash to Debt Crisis, NBER Working Paper No. 15795, Cambridge 2010 A. Szyszka, Behawioralne aspekty kryzysu finansowego, Bank i Kredyt 40 (4), Warszawa 2009