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The Global Financial Crises: Early Warnings, Consequences, and Policy Responses

Journal: SocioEconomic Challenges (SEC) (Vol.9, No. 3)

Publication Date:

Authors : ;

Page : 21-37

Keywords : financial system; stability; global crisis; financial crisis; bank credit; bank capital; regulatory capital; liquid assets; z-score; non-performing loans;

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Abstract

This study examines the impact of the 2008 global financial crisis on the stability of financial systems across 203 countries during the 2006–2009 period, covering pre-crisis, crisis, and post-crisis phases. Countries are grouped into four categories based on income and institutional status: 31 high-income OECD countries, 29 high-income non-OECD countries, 108 middle-income countries, and 35 low-income countries. Data on seven financial stability indicators, including bank Z-score, non-performing loans, bank capital to total assets, bank credit to deposits, regulatory capital to risk-weighted assets, liquid assets to short-term funding, and provisions to non-performing loans, are sourced from the World Bank’s Global Financial Development Database (GFDD). Non-parametric Mann-Whitney-Wilcoxon tests are applied to assess changes in these variables across the pre-crisis, crisis, and post-crisis periods. During the run-up to the crisis, none of the financial stability measures displayed statistically significant early warning signals across any income group. During the crisis, a significant increase in non-performing loans is observed in high-income OECD and middle-income countries, while liquid assets significantly decline in high-income non-OECD countries. No significant deterioration is detected in any stability measure for low-income countries. In the post-crisis period, bank capital and regulatory capital increased significantly in high-income OECD countries, while regulatory capital rose in high-income non-OECD and middle-income countries. The findings suggest that the crisis had a more prolonged and deeper impact on high-income OECD and middle-income countries, with differing policy responses observed across income groups. This research opens new prospects for comparative policy analysis in crisis response and underscores the importance of income-based financial system resilience assessment. It may serve as a valuable reference for international institutions, regulators, and scholars working to design more adaptive and context-specific financial stability frameworks. Future research could expand on these findings by incorporating micro-level data or exploring the role of institutional quality and regulatory effectiveness in shaping crisis outcomes.

Last modified: 2025-10-14 00:32:53