The Greek crisis: a story of self-reinforcing feedback mechanisms

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The Greek crisis : a story of self-reinforcing feedback mechanisms. / Juselius, Katarina; Dimelis, Sophia.

I: Economics, Bind 13, 04.02.2019, s. 1-23.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Juselius, K & Dimelis, S 2019, 'The Greek crisis: a story of self-reinforcing feedback mechanisms', Economics, bind 13, s. 1-23. https://doi.org/10.5018/economics-ejournal.ja.2019-11

APA

Juselius, K., & Dimelis, S. (2019). The Greek crisis: a story of self-reinforcing feedback mechanisms. Economics, 13, 1-23. https://doi.org/10.5018/economics-ejournal.ja.2019-11

Vancouver

Juselius K, Dimelis S. The Greek crisis: a story of self-reinforcing feedback mechanisms. Economics. 2019 feb. 4;13:1-23. https://doi.org/10.5018/economics-ejournal.ja.2019-11

Author

Juselius, Katarina ; Dimelis, Sophia. / The Greek crisis : a story of self-reinforcing feedback mechanisms. I: Economics. 2019 ; Bind 13. s. 1-23.

Bibtex

@article{306ca0f5fd8044eca527091470ff2d54,
title = "The Greek crisis: a story of self-reinforcing feedback mechanisms",
abstract = "While there seems to be a well-established consensus about the underlying causes to the Greek crisis, less is known about internal and external transmission mechanisms that ultimately caused unemployment to increase rapidly over this period. Motivated by the structural slumps theory in Phelps (Structural slumps, 1994), the paper attempts, therefore, to uncover the dynamic mechanisms behind prices, interest rates, and external imbalances that contributed to the severity and the length of the crisis. The authors find that the strongly increasing real bond rate and unemployment rate together with an persistently appreciating real exchange rate and a deterioration of competitiveness in the eurozone have contributed to persistently growing structural imbalances in the Greek economy. As the lack of confidence in the Greek economy grew steadily, the scene was set for a monumental structural slump. Over the crisis period, all variables exhibited self-reinforcing feedback adjustment somewhere in the system except for inflation rate. Unemployment took the burden of adjustment when the bond rate sky rocketed, competitiveness deteriorated, and confidence fell.",
keywords = "Greek crisis, unemployment, CVAR analysis, structural slumps, non-constant natural rate, self-reinforcing adjustment",
author = "Katarina Juselius and Sophia Dimelis",
year = "2019",
month = feb,
day = "4",
doi = "10.5018/economics-ejournal.ja.2019-11",
language = "English",
volume = "13",
pages = "1--23",
journal = "Economics",
issn = "1864-6042",
publisher = "Economics",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The Greek crisis

T2 - a story of self-reinforcing feedback mechanisms

AU - Juselius, Katarina

AU - Dimelis, Sophia

PY - 2019/2/4

Y1 - 2019/2/4

N2 - While there seems to be a well-established consensus about the underlying causes to the Greek crisis, less is known about internal and external transmission mechanisms that ultimately caused unemployment to increase rapidly over this period. Motivated by the structural slumps theory in Phelps (Structural slumps, 1994), the paper attempts, therefore, to uncover the dynamic mechanisms behind prices, interest rates, and external imbalances that contributed to the severity and the length of the crisis. The authors find that the strongly increasing real bond rate and unemployment rate together with an persistently appreciating real exchange rate and a deterioration of competitiveness in the eurozone have contributed to persistently growing structural imbalances in the Greek economy. As the lack of confidence in the Greek economy grew steadily, the scene was set for a monumental structural slump. Over the crisis period, all variables exhibited self-reinforcing feedback adjustment somewhere in the system except for inflation rate. Unemployment took the burden of adjustment when the bond rate sky rocketed, competitiveness deteriorated, and confidence fell.

AB - While there seems to be a well-established consensus about the underlying causes to the Greek crisis, less is known about internal and external transmission mechanisms that ultimately caused unemployment to increase rapidly over this period. Motivated by the structural slumps theory in Phelps (Structural slumps, 1994), the paper attempts, therefore, to uncover the dynamic mechanisms behind prices, interest rates, and external imbalances that contributed to the severity and the length of the crisis. The authors find that the strongly increasing real bond rate and unemployment rate together with an persistently appreciating real exchange rate and a deterioration of competitiveness in the eurozone have contributed to persistently growing structural imbalances in the Greek economy. As the lack of confidence in the Greek economy grew steadily, the scene was set for a monumental structural slump. Over the crisis period, all variables exhibited self-reinforcing feedback adjustment somewhere in the system except for inflation rate. Unemployment took the burden of adjustment when the bond rate sky rocketed, competitiveness deteriorated, and confidence fell.

KW - Greek crisis

KW - unemployment

KW - CVAR analysis

KW - structural slumps

KW - non-constant natural rate

KW - self-reinforcing adjustment

U2 - 10.5018/economics-ejournal.ja.2019-11

DO - 10.5018/economics-ejournal.ja.2019-11

M3 - Journal article

VL - 13

SP - 1

EP - 23

JO - Economics

JF - Economics

SN - 1864-6042

ER -

ID: 242294479