Publication | Open Access
Dimensions and Determinants of Financialisation: Comparing OECD Countries since 1997
50
Citations
77
References
2019
Year
Financial IntegrationDevelopment EconomicsFinancial Stability (Domestic Violence Research)International Financial CrisisInternational Financial ArchitectureFinancializationInternational FinanceFinancial Stability (International Finance)EconomicsComparing Oecd CountriesInternational Capital MarketLoansFinanceFinancial EconomicsMacroeconomicsFinancialisation LiteratureBusinessFinancial DeregulationDistinct FinancialisationFinancial Crisis
The financialisation literature has grown over the past decades. Despite a generally accepted definition, financialisation has been used to describe different phenomena. We distinguish between financialisation of non-financial companies, households and the financial sector and use activity and vulnerability measures. We identify seven financialisation hypotheses in the literature and empirically investigate them in a cross-country analysis for 17 OECD countries and two time periods, 1997–2007 as well as 2008–17. We find different financialisation measures are only weakly correlated, suggesting the existence of distinct financialisation processes. There is strong evidence that financialisation is linked to asset price inflation and correlated with a debt-driven demand regime. Financial deregulation encourages financialisation. There is limited evidence that market-based financial systems are more financialised. Foreign financial inflows do not seem a main driver. We do not find indication that an investment slowdown precedes financialisation. Our findings suggest financialisation should be understood as a variegated process, playing out differently across economic sectors and countries.
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