Evaluate Simple and Dynamic Probit Panel Models in Forecasting Banking Crises

Authors

  • Samadi, Saeed Associate Professor of Economics, Faculty Administrative Sciences and Economics
Abstract:

Empirical evidence shows that the banking crisis is one of the leading causes of economic crises. The occurrence of a banking crisis due to the interconnectedness of the banking network with countries' economies makes it very difficult to study and predict them. The research method in this research is applied. The statistical population of the research includes Saderat, Mellat, Tejarat, Eghtesad Novin, Parsian, Pasargad, Sina, Sarmayeh, Karafarin, Hekmat Iranian, Ansar, Shahr, Gardeshgari, Tose Etebari, Saman, Dey is the Khavaremianeh, and Postbank and the research period is from 2007 to 2017. This research has evaluated the banking crisis prediction by simple and dynamic probit panel method in two periods when the first period includes the first and second lags and the second period includes the third and fourth lags. For this purpose, the variables of total stock index, land price index, credit to GDP ratio, leverage, profit, and the capital ratio of each bank, which indicates the state of the country's economy and banks, are used. According to the results, the correct prediction rate in dynamic probit is higher than the simple probit prediction rate, and dynamic probit is more capable of predicting banking crises. On the other hand, the ratio of loans granted by banks to the private sector to GDP and the ratio of leverage have a significant and effective relationship with the probability of a banking crisis in Iran.

Upgrade to premium to download articles

Sign up to access the full text

Already have an account?login

similar resources

Dynamic Panel Probit with Flexible Correlated Effects

In this paper, we analyze a dynamic panel probit model with two flexible latent effects: first, unobserved individual heterogeneity that is allowed to vary in the population according to an assumption-free nonparametric distribution, and second, with a latent serially correlated common error component. In doing so, we extend the approach developed in Albert and Chib (1993), Albert and Chib (199...

full text

Central Banking , Free Banking , and Financial Crises

Agrowing literature explores the concept of free banking on both a theoretical and an historical basis. George Selgin (1988) sets out the theory of free banking and makes a compelling case that, despite the uniqueness of money, the forces of supply and demand are more conducive to monetary stability, correctly understood, than are the edicts of a central bank. Larry White (1984), focusing on th...

full text

Dynamic Panel Probit Models for Current Account Reversals and their Efficient Estimation

We use panel probit models with unobserved heterogeneity and serially correlated errors in order to analyze the determinants and the dynamics of current-account reversals for a panel of developing and emerging countries. The likelihood evaluation of these models requires high-dimensional integration for which we use a generic procedure known as Efficient Importance Sampling (EIS). Our empirical...

full text

Information Management in Banking Crises∗

A regulator resolving a bank faces two audiences: depositors, who may run if they believe the regulator will not provide capital, and banks, which may take excess risk if they believe the regulator will provide capital. When the regulator’s cost of injecting capital is private information, it manages expectations by using costly signals: (i) A regulator with a low cost of injecting capital may ...

full text

Banking bubbles and financial crises

This paper develops a tractable macroeconomic model with a banking sector in which banks face endogenous borrowing constraints. There is no uncertainty about economic fundamentals. Banking bubbles can emerge through a positive feedback loop mechanism. Changes in household confidence can cause the bubbles to burst, resulting in a financial crisis. Credit policy can mitigate economic downturns. T...

full text

Forecasting the Direction of the U.S. StockMarket with Dynamic Binary Probit Models

Several empirical studies have documented that the signs of excess stock returns are, to some extent, predictable. In this paper, we consider the predictive ability of the binary dependent dynamic probit model in predicting the direction of monthly excess stock returns. The recession forecast obtained from the model for a binary recession indicator appears to be the most useful predictive varia...

full text

My Resources

Save resource for easier access later

Save to my library Already added to my library

{@ msg_add @}


Journal title

volume 13  issue 

pages  393- 434

publication date 2021-06

By following a journal you will be notified via email when a new issue of this journal is published.

Keywords

No Keywords

Hosted on Doprax cloud platform doprax.com

copyright © 2015-2023