Business Cycle in Czechoslovakia Under Central Planning : Were Credit Shocks Causing it?

This paper examines credit origins of the business cycle in the former Czechoslovakia. Industrial production is found to be cointegrated with various measures of bank credit during 1976-90 and it is shown that noninvestment credits are Granger-causing industrial production and that a feedback relation exists between investment credits and industrial production. Although the potency of credit supply shocks to industrial production has been changing, production decline (growth) seems to follow credit tightening (loosening). However, the paper confirms that credit shocks were only a minor part of the output decline in 1989-90.
Publication date: November 1996
ISBN: 9781451934755
$15.00
Add to Cart by clicking price of the language and format you'd like to purchase
Available Languages and Formats
paperback else
English
Prices in red indicate formats that are not yet available but are forthcoming.
Topics covered in this book

This title contains information about the following subjects. Click on a subject if you would like to see other titles with the same subjects.

industrial production , granger causality , cointegration , statistics , time series

Summary