Faculty Working Papers

Growth Collapses

Abstract

We study episodes where economic growth decelerates to negative rates. While the majority of these episodes are of short duration, a substantial fraction last for a longer period of time than can be explained as the result of business-cycle dynamics. The duration, depth and associated output loss of these episodes differs dramatically across regions. We investigate the factors associated with the entry of countries into these episodes as well as their duration. We find that while countries fall into crises for multiple reasons, including wars, export collapses, sudden stops and political transitions, most of these variables do not help predict the duration of crises episodes. In contrast, we find that a measure of the density of a country’s export product space is significantly associated with lower crisis duration. We also find that unconditional and conditional hazard rates are decreasing in time, a fact that is consistent with either strong shocks to fundamentals or with models of poverty traps.

CID Faculty Working Paper Series
136
Keywords
stagnation, economic growth, duration analysis, structural transformation, exports
JEL Codes
C41, E32, O11, O25

Authors

Hausmann, R., Rodríguez, F. & Wagner, R.

Citation

Hausmann, R., Rodríguez, F. & Wagner, R., 2006. Growth Collapses.