GROWTH UNCERTAINTY AND RISKSHARING
Stefano Athanasoulis () and
Eric van Wincoop
No 41, Economic Report from Iowa State University Department of Economics
Abstract:
How large are potential benefits from global risksharing? In order to answer this question we propose a new methodology that is closely connected with the empirical growth literature. We obtain estimates of residual risk (growth uncertainty) at various horizons from regressions of country-specific growth in deviation from world growth on a wide set of variables in the information set. Since this residual risk can be entirely hedged through risksharing, we use it to obtain a measure of the potential welfare gain for a representative country. We find that nations can reap very large benefits from engaging in such risksharing arrangements. Using post-war data, the gain for a 35-year horizon, corresponding to an equivalent permanent increase in consumption, is 6.6% when based on a set of 49 countries, and 1.5% when based on 21 OECD countries. Using historical data from 1870 to 1990, we find that the potential gain for a 120-year horizon ranges from 4.9% for a small set of rich countries to 16.5% for a broad set of 24 countries.
Date: 1997-02
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (13)
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http://purl.umn.edu/18194 (application/pdf)
Related works:
Journal Article: Growth uncertainty and risksharing (2000) 
Working Paper: Growth uncertainty and risksharing (1997) 
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:isu:iowaer:41
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