
handle: 10419/109116
AbstractIn this paper, I explore the politically contested association between the degree of capitalism, captured by measures of economic freedom, and the risk and characteristics of economic crises. After offering some brief theoretical considerations, I estimate the effects of economic freedom on crisis risk in the post-Cold War period 1993–2010. I further estimate the effects on the duration, peak-to-trough GDP ratios and recovery times of 212 crises across 175 countries within this period. Estimates suggest that economic freedom is robustly associated with smaller peak-to-trough ratios and shorter recovery time. These effects are driven by regulatory components of the economic freedom index.
O43, Economics and Econometrics, O11, ddc:330, P16, Economic freedom, Institutions, Crisis, Crisis; Economic freedom; Institutions, Political Science and International Relations, jel: jel:O11, jel: jel:O43, jel: jel:P16
O43, Economics and Econometrics, O11, ddc:330, P16, Economic freedom, Institutions, Crisis, Crisis; Economic freedom; Institutions, Political Science and International Relations, jel: jel:O11, jel: jel:O43, jel: jel:P16
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