Authors:
Nauro F Campos, Paul De Grauwe, Yuemei Ji, Angelo Martelli, Orkun Saka
Date:
June 2019
Abstract:
Financial crisis can trigger policy reversals, i.e. they can lead to a process of re- regulation of financial markets. Using a recent comprehensive dataset on financial liberalization across 94 countries for the period between 1973 and 2015, we formally test the validity of this prediction for the member states of the European Union as well as for a global sample. We contribute by (a) using a new up-to date dataset of reforms and crises and (b) subjecting it to a combination of difference-in-differeeces and local projection estimations. In the global sample, our findings consistently confirm that crises lead to a reversal of liberal reforms, suggesting that governments react to crises by re-regulating financial markets. However, in a dynamic setting with impulse-responses, we also find that these new regulations are only temporary and a liberalization process restarts a few years after a financial crisis. One decade later, financial markets have returned to their pre-crisis level of liberalization. In the EU sample, however, we do not find sufficient evidence to support these observations.
Link: Financial Crises and Liberalisation: Progress or Reversals?