BA Theories (Business Administration & Management)

The Financial Instability Hypothesis

finance

This hypothesis emphasises the accumulation of debt by firms which in times of rising interest rates leads to corporate collapse and hence a fall in output thus compounding the fluctuations in the business cycle. The important intermediary role of the banking sector is also highlighted in the accumulation of debt by firms. The major elements of this hypothesis are:

The debt burden of firms is characterised by:

The financial instability hypothesis thus emphasises the economy is characterised by different financing regimes, some of which are stable and others unstable. During periods of prolonged economic prosperity, the economy moves from stable to unstable financial regimes as firms become over optimistic about economic conditions and hence increases borrowing which ultimately leads to an increase in debt. For example, firms move from speculative to Ponzi finance.

However, rising interest rates will create debt repayment problems. Specifically, firms which have undertaken speculative finance become Ponzi whilst Ponzi firms collapse. Consequently, this leads to a fall in output which aggravates fluctuations in the business cycle.

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