Crisis transmission: Some evidence from the Asian financial crisis |
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Authors: | Shang-Chi Gong Yea-Mow Chen |
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Affiliation: | a Graduate Institute of Finance, Fu-Jen Catholic University, Taipei, Taiwan b Department of Finance, San Francisco State University, 1600 Holloway Avenue, San Francisco, CA 94132, USA |
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Abstract: | We used a crisis measure of financial market as defined by Sexena (1998) to study the nature of crisis transmission and the channels through which the 1997 crisis was transmitted among Asian financial markets. Estimated with a vector autoregression (VAR) and an OLS model on Asian financial markets from January 1990 to December 1998, we found that:- 1.
- During the crisis period, crisis transmission was more significant than during other noncrisis periods;
- 2.
- Comparing the crisis transmission within the industrialized countries (Taiwan, Korea, and Japan), within the emerging countries (Thailand, Malaysia, The Philippines, and Indonesia), and between the industrialized and emerging groups, it is shown that
- 2.1.
- The crisis transmission among the three industrialized countries was not significant.
- 2.2.
- The crises originated from Thailand and Malaysia were transmitted to other emerging countries.
- 2.3.
- The crisis transmission between industrialized and emerging countries was not found to be significant. There was evidence showing that Singapore served as an intermediary transmitting crisis between industrialized and emerging countries during this particular crisis.
- 3.
- The transmission through the wake-up call effect was found to be more significant than other transmission channels. Trade relationship and cash-in effects only existed in Korea, Thailand, and Malaysia.
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Keywords: | Crisis transmission Asian financial crisis Financial markets |
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