Authors
Felipe Benguria, Alan M Taylor
Publication date
2020/12/1
Journal
American Economic Review: Insights
Volume
2
Issue
4
Pages
509-526
Publisher
American Economic Association
Description
Are financial crises a negative shock to aggregate demand or supply? This is a fundamental question for research and policy making. Arguments for stimulus usually presume demand-side shortfalls; arguments for tax cuts or structural reform look to the supply side. Resolving the question requires models with both mechanisms, and empirical tests to tell them apart. We develop a small open economy model, where a country is subject to deleveraging shocks that impose binding credit constraints on households and/or firms. These financial crisis events leave distinct statistical signatures in the time series record that divide sharply between each type of shock. Empirical analysis reveals a clear picture: after financial crises the dominant pattern is that imports contract, exports hold steady or even rise, and the real exchange rate depreciates. History shows financial crises are predominantly a negative shock to demand …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
F Benguria, AM Taylor - URL: https://voxeu. org/article/are-financial-crises …, 2020