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Working Paper

The Ugly and the Bad: Banking and Housing Crises Strangle Output Permanently, Ordinary Recessions Do Not

Kiel Working Papers, 1586

Authors

  • Boysen-Hogrefe
  • J.
  • Jannsen
  • N.
  • Meier
  • C.-P.

Publication Date

JEL Classification

E32 C33

Key Words

asymmetry

Banking Crisis

business cycle

Housing Crisis

Panel data

persistence

This paper provides empirical evidence suggesting that in industrial countries, recessions that are associated with either banking crises or housing crises dampen output far more than ordinary recessions. Using a parametric panel framework that allows for a bounceback of the level of output in the course of the cyclical recovery, we find that ordinary recessions are followed by strong recoveries that make up for almost all of the preceding shortfall in output. This bounceback tends to be significantly smaller following recessions associated with banking crises or housing crises. Our paper corroborates the practice of focusing exclusively on severe crises used in an emerging macroeconomic literature and integrates it with the earlier literature on recessions and recoveries.

Kiel Institute Experts

  • Prof. Dr. Jens Boysen-Hogrefe
    Kiel Institute Researcher
  • Dr. Nils Jannsen
    Kiel Institute Researcher

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