Revisiting the Link Between Political and Financial Crises in Africa
Sara Bertin,
Steve Ohana and
Vanessa Strauss-Kahn
Journal of African Economies, 2016, vol. 25, issue 3, 323-366
Abstract:
There is an important information deficit on political and financial risks in Africa. This article fills this gap by compiling a unique database of financial (sovereign, banking, currency and expropriation) and political crises (regime changes, ethnic and revolutionary wars, genocides and armed conflicts) covering fifty-three African countries between 1965 and 2008. We employ a new methodological framework to disentangle cross-crisis from temporal contagion effects. This allows us to extend to Africa a number of insights from the literature on financial crises (e.g., the mutual contagion effects between banking and currency meltdowns). Surprisingly, and critically for a study devoted to Africa, political upheavals are of modest relevance to predict financial crises. This last result may be reconciled with previous literature given our original focus on Africa and our event-based approach of financial and political risks.
Date: 2016
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Working Paper: Revisiting the Link between Political and Financial Crises in Africa (2014) 
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:oup:jafrec:v:25:y:2016:i:3:p:323-366.
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