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Systemic Crises and Growth
[report]
2005
unpublished
Countries that have experienced occasional financial crises have, on average, grown faster than countries with stable financial conditions. Because financial crises are realizations of downside risk, we measure their incidence by the skewness of credit growth. Unlike variance, negative skewness isolates the impact of the large, infrequent, and abrupt credit busts associated with crises. We find a robust negative link between skewness and GDP growth in a large sample of countries over 1960-2000.
doi:10.3386/w11076
fatcat:jaqkzm5qhrfv7dtppeqwcn63mq