Too Much Finance, or Statistical Illusion?

For nearly three decades, the dominant view on the role of the financial sector in economic development has been that greater financial depth facilitates faster growth. However, the Great Recession has shaken confidence in that view because of the contributing role of high leverage and such financia...

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Main Author: William R. Cline
Format: Report
Language:unknown
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Online Access:https://www.piie.com/publications/policy-briefs/too-much-finance-or-statistical-illusion
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spelling ftrepec:oai:RePEc:iie:pbrief:pb15-9 2024-04-14T08:13:49+00:00 Too Much Finance, or Statistical Illusion? William R. Cline https://www.piie.com/publications/policy-briefs/too-much-finance-or-statistical-illusion unknown https://www.piie.com/publications/policy-briefs/too-much-finance-or-statistical-illusion preprint ftrepec 2024-03-19T10:30:00Z For nearly three decades, the dominant view on the role of the financial sector in economic development has been that greater financial depth facilitates faster growth. However, the Great Recession has shaken confidence in that view because of the contributing role of high leverage and such financial innovations as collateralized subprime mortgage-backed assets and derivatives on them. Recent studies from the International Monetary Fund and Bank for International Settlements have argued that "too much finance" reduces growth. In an environment of new doubts about finance following the Great Recession, these studies finding that there can be too much of it seem to have struck a responsive chord. Cline warns that these findings should be viewed with considerable caution. He first shows that correlation without causation could similarly lead to the conclusion that too many doctors spoil growth, for example. He the demonstrates algebraically that if the variable of interest, be it financial depth, doctors, or any other good or service that rises along with per capita income, is incorporated in a quadratic form into a regression of growth on per capita income, there will be a necessary but spurious finding that above a certain point more of the good or service in question causes growth to decline. In some situations, finance can become excessive; the crises of Iceland and Ireland come to mind. But it is highly premature to adopt as a new stylized fact the recent studies' supposed thresholds beyond which more finance reduces growth. Report Iceland RePEc (Research Papers in Economics)
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description For nearly three decades, the dominant view on the role of the financial sector in economic development has been that greater financial depth facilitates faster growth. However, the Great Recession has shaken confidence in that view because of the contributing role of high leverage and such financial innovations as collateralized subprime mortgage-backed assets and derivatives on them. Recent studies from the International Monetary Fund and Bank for International Settlements have argued that "too much finance" reduces growth. In an environment of new doubts about finance following the Great Recession, these studies finding that there can be too much of it seem to have struck a responsive chord. Cline warns that these findings should be viewed with considerable caution. He first shows that correlation without causation could similarly lead to the conclusion that too many doctors spoil growth, for example. He the demonstrates algebraically that if the variable of interest, be it financial depth, doctors, or any other good or service that rises along with per capita income, is incorporated in a quadratic form into a regression of growth on per capita income, there will be a necessary but spurious finding that above a certain point more of the good or service in question causes growth to decline. In some situations, finance can become excessive; the crises of Iceland and Ireland come to mind. But it is highly premature to adopt as a new stylized fact the recent studies' supposed thresholds beyond which more finance reduces growth.
format Report
author William R. Cline
spellingShingle William R. Cline
Too Much Finance, or Statistical Illusion?
author_facet William R. Cline
author_sort William R. Cline
title Too Much Finance, or Statistical Illusion?
title_short Too Much Finance, or Statistical Illusion?
title_full Too Much Finance, or Statistical Illusion?
title_fullStr Too Much Finance, or Statistical Illusion?
title_full_unstemmed Too Much Finance, or Statistical Illusion?
title_sort too much finance, or statistical illusion?
url https://www.piie.com/publications/policy-briefs/too-much-finance-or-statistical-illusion
genre Iceland
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op_relation https://www.piie.com/publications/policy-briefs/too-much-finance-or-statistical-illusion
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