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Institutional Regimes, Long Wave Systemic Risk and Great International Crisis of 2008-2012

Phillip Anthony O’Hara ()

Panoeconomicus, 2012, vol. 59, issue 1, 1-12

Abstract: This paper studies the relationship between long-term growth of GDP per capita, institutional regimes of accumulation (ROA), systemic risk and the Great International Crisis of 2008-2010. The principle hypothesis behind the work is that the ROA provides a foundation for long-term growth as a type of fundamental variable, and that this growth provides a buffer against systemic risk in the sense that sustainable growth provides resources for debt provision and employment stimulation. The emergence of a viable ROA is crucial for long waves of growth which stimulate both private sector profit and public sector tax receipts which (using conventional terminology) reduce the structural deficit for both sectors. Low rates of long-term growth, therefore, provide a good indicator of the emergence of “long wave systemic risk” (LWSR), which left such nations vulnerable to uncertainty, financial crisis and recession. The paper investigates the inability of growth for various decades to “cover” instabilities associated with the Great Crisis, leading to high rates of LWSR, especially for European and North American nations that bore the brunt of the crisis. Key words: Institutional regimes, Long wave systemic risk, Great international crisis.JEL: B50, E10, G01, O57, P16.

Keywords: Institutional regimes; Long wave systemic risk; Great international crisis (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2012
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