The long history of financial boom-bust cycles in Iceland - Part I: Financial crises

Iceland suffered a severe financial crisis in 2008 which can only be described as the perfect storm, with the currency falling by more than 50% and over 90% of the domestic financial system collapsing. What followed was a deep recession. This was not the first financial crisis experienced in Iceland...

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Main Authors: Bjarni G. Einarsson, Kristófer Gunnlaugsson, Thorvardur Tjörvi Ólafsson, Thórarinn G. Pétursson
Format: Report
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Online Access:http://www.cb.is/library/Skr%C3%A1arsafn---EN/Working-Papers/WP68.pdf
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spelling ftrepec:oai:RePEc:ice:wpaper:wp68 2024-04-14T08:13:32+00:00 The long history of financial boom-bust cycles in Iceland - Part I: Financial crises Bjarni G. Einarsson Kristófer Gunnlaugsson Thorvardur Tjörvi Ólafsson Thórarinn G. Pétursson http://www.cb.is/library/Skr%C3%A1arsafn---EN/Working-Papers/WP68.pdf unknown http://www.cb.is/library/Skr%C3%A1arsafn---EN/Working-Papers/WP68.pdf preprint ftrepec 2024-03-19T10:27:10Z Iceland suffered a severe financial crisis in 2008 which can only be described as the perfect storm, with the currency falling by more than 50% and over 90% of the domestic financial system collapsing. What followed was a deep recession. This was not the first financial crisis experienced in Iceland, however. In fact, over a period spanning almost one and a half century (1875-2013), we identify over twenty instances of financial crises of different types. Recognising that crises tend to come in clusters, we identify six serious multiple financial crisis episodes occurring every fifteen years on average. These episodes seem to share many commonalities and the tragic but universal truth that “we’ve been there before” when it comes to financial crises really becomes all too clear. We find that these episodes usually involve a large collapse in domestic demand that in most cases serves as a trigger for theensuing crisis. What typically follows is a currency crisis, sometimes coinciding with a sudden stop of capital inflows and an inflation crisis, and most often a banking crisis. In line with international evidence, we find that contractions coinciding with these large financial crises tend to be both deeper and longer than regular business cycle downturns. Although the crisis episodes share many common elements, each one of them is also different to some extent. We are therefore not able to find financial variables that consistently provide an early-warning signal of an upcoming financial crisis across all the six episodes. However, we find that some key macroeconomic variables give a somewhat more robust signal. Our results also suggest that five of the six multiple crisis episodes coincide with a global financial crisis of some type, and that the most serious global episodes coincide with a twoto threefold increase in the probability of a financial crisis in Iceland. A companion paper (Part II) extends our analysis of the Icelandic financial boom-bust cycle to identifying financial cycles in our long data set, ... Report Iceland RePEc (Research Papers in Economics)
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description Iceland suffered a severe financial crisis in 2008 which can only be described as the perfect storm, with the currency falling by more than 50% and over 90% of the domestic financial system collapsing. What followed was a deep recession. This was not the first financial crisis experienced in Iceland, however. In fact, over a period spanning almost one and a half century (1875-2013), we identify over twenty instances of financial crises of different types. Recognising that crises tend to come in clusters, we identify six serious multiple financial crisis episodes occurring every fifteen years on average. These episodes seem to share many commonalities and the tragic but universal truth that “we’ve been there before” when it comes to financial crises really becomes all too clear. We find that these episodes usually involve a large collapse in domestic demand that in most cases serves as a trigger for theensuing crisis. What typically follows is a currency crisis, sometimes coinciding with a sudden stop of capital inflows and an inflation crisis, and most often a banking crisis. In line with international evidence, we find that contractions coinciding with these large financial crises tend to be both deeper and longer than regular business cycle downturns. Although the crisis episodes share many common elements, each one of them is also different to some extent. We are therefore not able to find financial variables that consistently provide an early-warning signal of an upcoming financial crisis across all the six episodes. However, we find that some key macroeconomic variables give a somewhat more robust signal. Our results also suggest that five of the six multiple crisis episodes coincide with a global financial crisis of some type, and that the most serious global episodes coincide with a twoto threefold increase in the probability of a financial crisis in Iceland. A companion paper (Part II) extends our analysis of the Icelandic financial boom-bust cycle to identifying financial cycles in our long data set, ...
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author Bjarni G. Einarsson
Kristófer Gunnlaugsson
Thorvardur Tjörvi Ólafsson
Thórarinn G. Pétursson
spellingShingle Bjarni G. Einarsson
Kristófer Gunnlaugsson
Thorvardur Tjörvi Ólafsson
Thórarinn G. Pétursson
The long history of financial boom-bust cycles in Iceland - Part I: Financial crises
author_facet Bjarni G. Einarsson
Kristófer Gunnlaugsson
Thorvardur Tjörvi Ólafsson
Thórarinn G. Pétursson
author_sort Bjarni G. Einarsson
title The long history of financial boom-bust cycles in Iceland - Part I: Financial crises
title_short The long history of financial boom-bust cycles in Iceland - Part I: Financial crises
title_full The long history of financial boom-bust cycles in Iceland - Part I: Financial crises
title_fullStr The long history of financial boom-bust cycles in Iceland - Part I: Financial crises
title_full_unstemmed The long history of financial boom-bust cycles in Iceland - Part I: Financial crises
title_sort long history of financial boom-bust cycles in iceland - part i: financial crises
url http://www.cb.is/library/Skr%C3%A1arsafn---EN/Working-Papers/WP68.pdf
genre Iceland
genre_facet Iceland
op_relation http://www.cb.is/library/Skr%C3%A1arsafn---EN/Working-Papers/WP68.pdf
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