FINANCIAL LIBERALISATION, CREDIT RATIONING AND SLOW GROWTH IN MEXICO: TESTING THE MCKINNON-SHAW HYPOTHESIS
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.22456/2176-5456.10721Palavras-chave:
Financial repression. Financial liberalisation. Growth. Credit. Crises.Resumo
The Mexican experience with financial liberalisation provides an interesting case of study for countries facing financial instability problems. The aim of this paper is twofold: first, to provide an overview of the macroeconomic effects of the lending boom associated with Mexico's transition from a financially repressed regime to financial liberalisation. And second, to empirically assess whether the McKinnon-Shaw hypothesis holds in this case. It is argued that financial liberalisation tends to generate financial fragility, credit rationing and long-run slow growth.Downloads
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2009-10-09
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Hernández, I. P. (2009). FINANCIAL LIBERALISATION, CREDIT RATIONING AND SLOW GROWTH IN MEXICO: TESTING THE MCKINNON-SHAW HYPOTHESIS. Análise Econômica, 21(39). https://doi.org/10.22456/2176-5456.10721
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