dc.creatorGonzález, Alejandro
dc.creatorPérez-Caldentey, Esteban
dc.date.accessioned2018-12-18T12:34:36Z
dc.date.available2018-12-18T12:34:36Z
dc.date.created2018-12-18T12:34:36Z
dc.date.issued2018-07
dc.identifierReview of Keynesian Economics, 6(3), jul 2018, 378-410 pp.
dc.identifier2049-5323
dc.identifier10.4337/roke.2018.03.06
dc.identifierhttps://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/153390
dc.description.abstractHyman Minsky's financial instability hypothesis (FIH) argues that as part of the normal functioning of capitalist economies robust financial structures tend to evolve into highly leveraged fragile financial structures. The paradox of debt challenges the very foundation of Minsky's FIH as it maintains that the upward and downward phases of business cycles need not be characterized by processes of respective leveraging and deleveraging. Using a panel of firm-level data and seemingly unrelated regressions we analyse the relationship between debt and investment for 12 Latin American countries for the years 2005 (expansion) and 2009 (contraction). We reject the paradox of debt in favor of the FIH, regardless of our model specification or the choice of external financing. The FIH seems to intensify in expansions with respect to recessions, and its intensification during expansions is explained by a larger fraction of firms acquiring debt and new investment projects, rather than from further leveraging for those firms already engaged in fixed investment.
dc.languageen
dc.publisherEdward Elgar Publishing
dc.sourceReview of Keynesian Economics
dc.subjectMinsky
dc.subjectfinancial instability hypothesis
dc.subjectparadox of debt
dc.subjectLatin America
dc.titleThe financial instability hypothesis and the paradox of debt: a microeconometric approach for Latin America
dc.typeArtículo de revista


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