Crises Do Not Cause Lower Short-Term Growth
Econometrics
2022-11-14 v3
Abstract
It is commonly believed that financial crises "lead to" lower growth of a country during the two-year recession period, which can be reflected by their post-crisis GDP growth. However, by contrasting a causal model with a standard prediction model, this paper argues that such a belief is non-causal. To make causal inferences, we design a two-stage staggered difference-in-differences model to estimate the average treatment effects. Interpreting the residuals as the contribution of each crisis to the treatment effects, we astonishingly conclude that cross-sectional crises are often limited to providing relevant causal information to policymakers.
Cite
@article{arxiv.2211.04558,
title = {Crises Do Not Cause Lower Short-Term Growth},
author = {Kaiwen Hou and David Hou and Yang Ouyang and Lulu Zhang and Aster Liu},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2211.04558},
year = {2022}
}
Comments
12 pages, 3 figures, 5 regressions, 1 conclusion