THE INTERDEPENDENCE BETWEEN THE FINANCIAL SECTOR AND BUSINESS SECTOR IN ASEAN 4 COUNTRIES

https://doi.org/10.22146/jieb.28659

Aulia Keiko Hubbansyah(1*), Zaafri Ananto Husodo(2)

(1) Faculty of Economics, Universitas Djuanda
(2) Faculty of Economics and Business, Universitas Indonesia
(*) Corresponding Author

Abstract


In this study, we analyze the dynamic interactions between the financial sectors and the business sectors in the ASEAN-4 countries (Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand and Singapore). To do that, we apply the newly generalized version of the Vector Autoregressive Framework (VAR) spillover index approach proposed by Diebold and Yilmaz (2012) as our method of analysis. Based on quarterly data of each variable over the period from the first quarter of 1984 to the fourth quarter of 2015 for the ASEAN-4 countries, this study finds that: 1) Spillovers between the variables move in a diverse manner over the period of analysis for each country, 2) The variable that acts as the dominant crisis transmitter in each country is different for each country, 3) The interdependence between the variables became stronger, both within and across the countries, during the crisis period. In particular, the business sectors played a leading role during the onset of the crisis, while the financial sectors took their places as the dominant source of spillovers as the crisis deepened. 4) Credit growth in Thailand was found to be the dominant transmitter of shocks to the ASEAN-3 countries. Overall, these results suggest that the strength and movement of the spillovers between the financial and business sectors changed from time to time along with the changes that happened in the economies.  


Keywords


financial sector, business sector, financial cycle, business cycle, spillover, crisis

Full Text:

Aulia & Zaafri


References

Aizenman, J., Pinto, B., & Sushko, V. (2013). Financial sector ups and downs and the real sector in the open economy: Up by the stairs, down by the parachute. Emerging Markets Review, 16, 1-30.

Almekinders, G., Fukuda, S., Mourmouras & A., Zhou, J. (2015). ASEAN financial integration (No. 15-34). International Monetary Fund.

Antonakakis, N., Breitenlechner, M., & Scharler, J. (2015). Business cycle and financial cycle spillovers in the G7 countries. The Quarterly Review of Economics and Finance, 58, 154-162.

Apostoaie, C. M., & Percic, S. (2014). Credit cycles and business cycles in twenty EU economies. Procedia Economics and Finance, 15, 1055-1064.

ASEAN Statistic. (2016). ASEAN statistic yearbook 2016. Jakarta, The ASEAN Secretariat.

Azis, I. J. (2013). The capital market in the context of financial safety nets. Oxford, Oxford University Press.

Baur, D. G. (2012). Financial contagion and the real economy. Journal of Banking & Finance, 36(10), 2680-2692.

Bernanke, B. S., Gertler, M., S. Gilchrist (1999). Handbook of macroeconomics: The financial accelerator in a quantitative business cycle framework. Amsterdam: Elsevier Science.

Bry, G., Boschan, G. (1971). Cyclical analysis of time series: Selected procedures and computer programs. New York, NBER.

Chaney, T., Sraer, D., & Thesmar, D. (2012). The collateral channel: How real estate shocks affect corporate investment. American Economic Review, 102(6), 2381-2409.

Claessens, S., Kose, M. A., & Terrones, M. E. (2011, May). Financial cycles: what? how? when?. In International Seminar on Macroeconomics (Vol. 7, No. 1, pp. 303-344). Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press.

Claessens, S., & Kose, M. M. A. (2013). Financial crises explanations, types, and implications (No. 13-28). International Monetary Fund.

Conefrey, T., & Cronin, D. (2015). Spillover in euro area sovereign bond markets. The Economic and Social Review, 46(2, Summer), 197-231.

Dees, S. (2016). Credit, asset prices and business cycles at the global level. Economic Modelling, 54, 139-152.

Diebold, F. X., & Yilmaz, K. (2009). Measuring financial asset return and volatility spillovers, with application to global equity markets. The Economic Journal, 119(534), 158-171.

Diebold, F. X., & Yilmaz, K. (2012). Better to give than to receive: Predictive directional measure­ment of volatility spillovers. International Journal of Forecasting, 28(1), 57-66.

Goldsmith, R. W. (1969). Financial structure and development. New Haven: Yale University Press.

Gonzalez, R. B., Lima, J., & Marinho, L. (2015). Business and financial cycles: an estimation of cycles’ length focusing on Macroprudential Policy (Banco Central do Brasil Working Papers No. 385).

Harding, D., & Pagan, A. (2002). Dissecting the cycle: a methodological investigation. Journal of monetary economics, 49(2), 365-381.

Jordà, Ò., Schularick, M., & Taylor, A. M. (2013). When credit bites back. Journal of Money, Credit and Banking, 45(s2), 3-28.

King, R. G., & Levine, R. (1993). Finance, entrepreneurship and growth. Journal of Monetary economics, 32(3), 513-542.

Koop, G., Pesaran, M. H., & Potter, S. M. (1996). Impulse response analysis in nonlinear multivariate models. Journal of econometrics, 74(1), 119-147.

López, M., Tenjo, F., & Zárate, H. (2014). Credit cycles, credit risk and countercyclical loan provisions. Ensayos sobre Política Económica, 32(74), 9-17.

McKinnon, R. (1973). Money and capital in economic development. Washington, Brookings Institute.

Pesaran, H. H., & Shin, Y. (1998). Generalized impulse response analysis in linear multivariate models. Economics letters, 58(1), 17-29.

Pouvelle, M. C. (2012). Bank credit, asset prices and financial stability: Evidence from French banks (No. 12-103). International Monetary Fund.

Rand, J., & Tarp, F. (2002). Business cycles in developing countries: are they different?. World development, 30(12), 2071-2088.

Robinson, J. (1952). The Generalization of the General Theory. In The Rate of Interest and Other Essays, London: MacMillan.

Shaw, E. S. (1973). Financial deepening in economic development. New York, Oxford University Press.

Schularick, M., & Taylor, A. M. (2012). Credit booms gone bust: Monetary policy, leverage cycles, and financial crises, 1870-2008. American Economic Review, 102(2), 1029-61.



DOI: https://doi.org/10.22146/jieb.28659

Article Metrics

Abstract views : 4383 | views : 4438

Refbacks

  • There are currently no refbacks.




Copyright (c) 2018 Journal of Indonesian Economy and Business

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.

Journal of Indonesian Economy and Business

Journal

Editorial Team
Focus and Scope
Peer Review Process
Publication Ethics
Screening for Plagiarism

Authors

Author Guidelines
Submission Guidelines
Online Submissions
Copyright Notice
Privacy Statement
Author Fees

Download

Author Pack
Submission Form & Manuscript Template

 

Reviewer

Reviewer Guidelines
Reviewer Acknowledgement

 

Reader

General Search
Achieves
Author index
Title index

 

 

The Journal of Indonesian Economy and Business (print ISSN 2085-8272; online ISSN 2338-5847) is published by the Faculty of Economics and Business Universitas Gadjah Mada, Indonesia. The content of this website is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License

© 2019 Journal of Indonesian Economy and Business 
 Visitor Statistics