Commodity cycles and financial instability in emerging economies

<jats:title>Abstract</jats:title><jats:p>Commodity-exporting economies display procyclicality with the price of commodity exports. However, the evidence for the relative importance of commodity price shocks for aggregate fluctuations remains inconclusive. Using Russian data from 2001 to 2018 we estimate a small open economy New Keynesian model with a banking system and leveraged domestic firms who default on their unsecured domestic debt. We show that allowing default rates to vary endogenously over the business cycle amplifies the estimated contribution of commodity price shocks. Endogenous default introduces time-varying wedges that amplify the response of commodity price shocks through demand and income effects rather than the relative price effects that are found in the country risk-premium, balance sheet, and financial accelerator channels. We find that the contribution of commodity prices to explaining fluctuations in GDP rises from 2.5 to 33.6% while for deposits and non-performing loans, it increases from 5.3% and 1.6% to 71.3% and 60.4%, respectively.</jats:p>

Authors
Andreev Mikhail 1 , Peiris M.U. 2 , Shirobokov Alexander 3 , Tsomocos D.P. 4
Publisher
Springer-Verlag GmbH
Language
English
State
Published
Year
2024
Organizations
  • 1 Bank of Russia, Russian Federation, Moscow, Russia
  • 2 Department of Economics, Oberlin College, Oberlin, USA
  • 3 ICEF, HSE University, Russian Federation, Moscow, Russia
  • 4 Saïd Business School and St Edmund Hall, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK
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