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Sovereign credit ratings, growth volatility and the global financial crisis

Hassan and Eliza Wu

Applied Economics, 2015, vol. 47, issue 54, 5825-5840

Abstract: Using monthly data from January 1996 to May 2010 for a panel of 76 developed and emerging economies and adopting an instrumental variable (IV) estimation technique by correcting for both heterogeneity and endogeneity with the generalized two-stage least squares (G2SLS, EC2SLS) procedure method suggested by Balestra and Varadharajan-Krishnakumar (1987) and Baltagi and Li (1995), this article provides empirical evidence that volatility of per capita GDP growth is reduced when there are positive changes in credit ratings; in other words when sovereign credit risk improves. To deal with potential simultaneity between sovereign credit ratings and output volatility, a system (3SLS) approach is undertaken, and our findings remain robust. By weakening the volatility dampening effects of ratings changes, it is found that the global financial crisis ( GFC ) has enhanced macroeconomic volatility. One of the channels via which sovereign rating changes affect growth volatility is the financial markets' repricing of sovereign default risk that is reflected in sovereign credit default swap (CDS) spreads and its volatility.

Date: 2015
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DOI: 10.1080/00036846.2015.1058910

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