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The Effect of Loss Experiences in a Banking Crisis on Future Expectations and Behavior
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Shannon Mudd
, Konstantin Pashev and Neven T Valev
Published/Copyright:
November 1, 2010
Surveys taken in Bulgaria in both 2008 and 2009 show that people who had experienced a loss during an earlier banking crisis are significantly more likely to expect a new crisis. This result holds despite more than a decade between the earlier crisis and the surveys as well as the dramatically improved performance and stability of both the financial sector and the economy in the meantime. The loss experience also affects behavior. People who experienced a loss in the earlier crisis were more likely to have withdrawn funds from bank deposits in the midst of the international banking crisis in 2009.
Published Online: 2010-11-1
©2011 Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG, Berlin/Boston
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- The Role of the Real Interest Rate in U.S. Macroeconomic History
- Price Dynamics and Asymmetric Business Cycles under Mixed State and Time Dependent Pricing Rules
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