The Colombian Banking and Crisis: Macroeconomic Consequences and What to Expect
While in the early nineties Colombia grew at rates exceeding 4% and was catalogued as one of the top emerging markets, in 1999 its economy fell 4%, its exchange rate regime (a target zone) collapsed and by June of 2000 its unemployment level peaked at 20.4%. This turn of events is associated to an episode of financial distress and a troubled intermediary sector that has haunted the Colombian economy in the late 1990's. The purpose of this paper is to understand the macoeconomic consequences of the recent financial crisis in Colombia. I solve, calibrate and simulate a simple version of the optimal growt model where banks absorb real resources from the economy and are also vulnerable to crises. The results are useful because the replicate the recent behavoir of several macroeconomic variables in Colombia. Moreover, they give some insight into what should be expected from these variables in the near future. There are two fundamental take aways. First, the negative income and welfare effects of the Colombian financial crisis are non-negligible and long lasting (five years approximately). Second, the data suggest that the crisis which permeated the Colombian financial system since the last months of 1997 or first months of 1998 has been deepened by another adverse financial shock that hit the Colombian intermediary sector in mid/late 1999.
Authors: | Arias, Andrés Felipe |
---|---|
Institutions: | Banco de la Republica de Colombia |
Saved in:
freely available
Saved in favorites
Similar items by person
-
Monetary Neutrality in the Colombian Real Exchange Rate
Arias, Andrés Felipe,
-
Tasa de Cambio Real e Inversión. La Experiencia de 1990-1996
Arias, Andrés Felipe,
-
Banking productivity and economic fluctuations : Colombia 1998 - 2000
Arias, Andres F., (2002)
- More ...