Financial Crisis and Credit Crunch as a Result of Inefficient Financial Intermediation-with Reference to the Asian Financial Crisis [electronic resource] / Zhaohui Chen.
Material type: TextSeries: IMF Working Papers; Working Paper ; No. 98/127Publication details: Washington, D.C. : International Monetary Fund, 1998Description: 1 online resource (24 p.)ISBN: 1451935994 :ISSN: 1018-5941Subject(s): Asian Crisis | Capital Flow | Capital Flows | Capital Inflow Inertia | Capital Inflow | Capital Outflow | Indonesia | Korea, Republic of | Malaysia | Philippines | ThailandAdditional physical formats: Print Version:: Financial Crisis and Credit Crunch as a Result of Inefficient Financial Intermediation-with Reference to the Asian Financial CrisisOnline resources: IMF e-Library | IMF Book Store Abstract: This paper develops a model of private debt financing under inefficient financial intermediation. It suggests a mechanism that can generate the following sequence of events observed in the recent Asian crisis: A period of relatively low capital flow despite a steady improvement in economic fundamentals (capital inflow inertia), followed by a fast buildup of capital inflow, and ended with a large capital outflow and domestic credit crunch. Unlike other models requiring large movements in fundamentals or asset prices to explain a financial crisis, this model can exhibit large credit/capital flow swings with moderate changes in the economic and market environment.This paper develops a model of private debt financing under inefficient financial intermediation. It suggests a mechanism that can generate the following sequence of events observed in the recent Asian crisis: A period of relatively low capital flow despite a steady improvement in economic fundamentals (capital inflow inertia), followed by a fast buildup of capital inflow, and ended with a large capital outflow and domestic credit crunch. Unlike other models requiring large movements in fundamentals or asset prices to explain a financial crisis, this model can exhibit large credit/capital flow swings with moderate changes in the economic and market environment.
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