FINSYS RECOVERY | European financial systems in post-crisis recovery

Summary
FINSYS RECOVERY i) provides a detailed view of how European financial systems (FS) evolved in the period 2005-2020; and ii) quantitatively investigates how shocks in the shape of crisis events (e.g. the global financial crisis, the EURO crisis and the COVID-19 pandemic) and related policy responses influenced FS trajectories across European countries in this period.

The project seeks to generate new ways of understanding FS and their transformations by drawing on an interdisciplinary framework based on financial economics, political economy and corporate governance. By regressing panel data on macroeconomic outcomes and policy responses of different crises on an innovative country-based FS metric, it applies methods that are uncommon in research on FS. The FS metric enables the construction of a spectrum of FS across countries that can be tracked over time. This, in turn, allows for looking beyond the extant literature’s dichotomous conceptualization of FS as either bank- or market-based. In addition, it sheds light on issues that are often neglected in FS research, such as the role of cross-border listings or borrowing and the role of non-bank financial intermediaries. By using a large European panel dataset, the project seeks to generate new insights on the direction, speed and lag by which shocks influence FS. FINSYS RECOV thereby complements earlier research that typically focuses on how outcomes of shocks vary between different FS, or case-based research on how select small numbers of FS have responded to particular shocks.

Generating insights on how FS respond to shocks, and if EU FS are converging or diverging, could hardly be timelier. There are ongoing political initiatives to promote deeper integration of EU FS, while at the same time counterfactors such as Brexit and nationalism appear to pull the EU apart. And this occurs against the backdrop of another major economic crisis, as the grip COVID-19 has tightened over our economies.
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More information & hyperlinks
Web resources: https://cordis.europa.eu/project/id/101029788
Start date: 15-11-2021
End date: 13-11-2024
Total budget - Public funding: 219 312,00 Euro - 219 312,00 Euro
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Original description

FINSYS RECOVERY i) provides a detailed view of how European financial systems (FS) evolved in the period 2005-2020; and ii) quantitatively investigates how shocks in the shape of crisis events (e.g. the global financial crisis, the EURO crisis and the COVID-19 pandemic) and related policy responses influenced FS trajectories across European countries in this period.

The project seeks to generate new ways of understanding FS and their transformations by drawing on an interdisciplinary framework based on financial economics, political economy and corporate governance. By regressing panel data on macroeconomic outcomes and policy responses of different crises on an innovative country-based FS metric, it applies methods that are uncommon in research on FS. The FS metric enables the construction of a spectrum of FS across countries that can be tracked over time. This, in turn, allows for looking beyond the extant literature’s dichotomous conceptualization of FS as either bank- or market-based. In addition, it sheds light on issues that are often neglected in FS research, such as the role of cross-border listings or borrowing and the role of non-bank financial intermediaries. By using a large European panel dataset, the project seeks to generate new insights on the direction, speed and lag by which shocks influence FS. FINSYS RECOV thereby complements earlier research that typically focuses on how outcomes of shocks vary between different FS, or case-based research on how select small numbers of FS have responded to particular shocks.

Generating insights on how FS respond to shocks, and if EU FS are converging or diverging, could hardly be timelier. There are ongoing political initiatives to promote deeper integration of EU FS, while at the same time counterfactors such as Brexit and nationalism appear to pull the EU apart. And this occurs against the backdrop of another major economic crisis, as the grip COVID-19 has tightened over our economies.

Status

SIGNED

Call topic

MSCA-IF-2020

Update Date

28-04-2024
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