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Early warning systems (EWS) for banking crises generally omit bank capital, bank liquidity and property prices. Most work on EWS has been for global samples dominated by emerging market crises where time series data on bank capital adequacy and property prices are typically absent. We estimate...
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Low levels of bank capital and liquidity in combination with ongoing crises in other countries are shown to increase the probability of banking crises in OECD countries. Hence global coordination of regulatory reform is vital for reducing crisis risks.
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Credit growth is widely used as an indicator of potential financial stress, and it plays a role in the new Basel III framework. However, it is not clear how good an indicator it is in markets that have been financially liberalised. We take a sample of 14 OECD countries and 14 Latin American and...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10010686483
Against the background of the acknowledged importance of off-balance-sheet exposures in the sub prime crisis, we seek to investigate whether this was a new phenomenon or common to earlier crises. Using a logit approach to predicting banking crises in 14 OECD countries we find a significant...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10010729639
Existing work on early warning systems (EWS) for banking crises generally omits bank capital, bank liquidity and property prices, despite their relevance to the probability of crisis in the mind of bankers, policymakers and the public. One reason for this neglect is that most work on EWS to date...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10008518228
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