Concepedia

Concept

systemic risk (financial economics)

Variants

Systemic Risks

Parents

42

Publications

2.7K

Citations

116

Authors

58

Institutions

About

Systemic risk (financial economics) is the risk of disruption to financial services that is caused by an impairment of all or parts of the financial system. It refers specifically to the potential for initial failures or distress in one or more financial institutions, markets, or payment systems to trigger a cascade of subsequent failures or disruptions throughout the interconnected financial network, leading to a widespread financial crisis or economic collapse. This concept emphasizes the interconnectedness and feedback loops within the financial system that can amplify initial shocks through channels such as counterparty exposures, asset price contagion, and loss of confidence. Analyzing and mitigating systemic risk is a fundamental concern in financial security, international finance, risk analysis, and quantitative finance, informing regulatory frameworks and policies, including aspects of insurance regulations, designed to preserve overall financial stability and prevent system-wide instability.

Top Authors

Rankings shown are based on concept H-Index.

OR

University of Stuttgart

PS

Research Institute for Sustainability at GFZ

KL

RWTH Aachen University

AJ

École Supérieure de Commerce de Rennes

RM

École Supérieure de Commerce de Rennes

Top Institutions

Rankings shown are based on concept H-Index.

Washington D.C., United States

Washington D.C., United States

FH Aachen

Aachen, Germany