Financial Fragility and Public Social Spending: Unraveling the Endogenous Nexus
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Theoretical Foundation of the Financial Fragility Hypothesis
- (a)
- Starting from “stability economic conditions”, the domestic results mainly increase the profitability of the private sector. “Hedge financing structure” prevails. In general, PSS is expected to decrease as output raises [↓ E(PSS)].
- (b)
- The entrance of new foreign direct investments (FDIs) or even short-run portfolios increase risky options for domestic small-medium enterprises (SMEs), which seek bank credits and discretionary fiscal policy resulting in financial leverage—indebtedness—while the inflated asset prices and exposure to foreign funds feed instability conditions of “hyper-speculative financing structure”. In general, PSS is expected to increase as output is squeezed [↑ E(PSS)].
- (c)
- The “animal spirits” of the financial downturn should be “paid” by the government through austerity policies… “Ponzi-finance” is exacerbated by the Eurozone’s inherent fragility. In general, PSS is expected to increase as output is squeezed [↑ E(PSS)]. New markets’ structures give birth to a new round from stability to instability, and so on.
3. Research Design, Modeling and Data
4. Empirical Analysis and Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Definition | Label (Location) | Sources |
---|---|---|
Employment in Public Administration, Social Security, Education, and Health as a ratio of the total employment. | PASSEH-TOT (Figure A1) | Quarterly National Accounts, copyright OECD (The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development) via Refinitiv (LSEG). |
Manufacturing employment as a ratio of the total. | MNF-TOT (Figure A1) | Quarterly National Accounts, copyright OECD via Refinitiv. … Manufacturing … |
Financial and Insurance Activities’ employment as a ratio of the total. | FI-TOT (Figure A1) | Quarterly National Accounts, copyright OECD via Refinitiv. … Financial and Insurance Activities … |
Real Estate Activities’ employment as a ratio of the total. | RE-TOT (Figure A1) | Quarterly National Accounts, copyright OECD via Refinitiv. … Real Estate Activities … |
Financial and Insurance Activities’ employment as a ratio of the Manufacturing one. | FI-MFN (Figure A1) | Authors’ calculations based on OECD data via Refinitiv. |
Gross Operating Surplus (GOS) of the Non-Financial Firms (S.11). | GOS-S11GDP (Figure A2 & Model 1) | Hellenic Statistical Authority and Refinitiv/OECD data. |
Gross Operating Surplus of the Financial Firms (S.12). | GOS-S12GDP (Figure A2 & Model 1) | Hellenic Statistical Authority and Refinitiv/OECD data via Refinitiv. |
Ratio of the GOS of the financial to the non-financial sector. | S12/S11 (Figure A2) | Authors’ calculations based on Hellenic Statistical Authority and OECD data via Refinitiv. |
Gross domestic product, current prices, seasonally adjusted | GDPCUSA (Figure A2) | Hellenic Statistical Authority via Refinitiv. |
Total Net Operating Income of Credit Institutions in Greece (=Net Interest Income + Net Fee and Commission Income + Dividend Income + Net Gains on Financial Transactions + Other Income) as Ratios of their Total Assets. | TNOI-TASS (Figure A3) | Authors’ calculations based on Bank of Greece data. |
Total Net Operating Income of Credit Institutions in Greece as Ratios of their Net Capital. | TNOI-NCAP (Figure A3) | Authors’ calculations based on Bank of Greece data. |
Index prices of dwellings (historical series), urban areas. 1997 = 100 | DWELLPI (Figure A4) | Bank of Greece. |
Greece, Capital Markets, Market Capitalization of Listed Domestic Companies (% of Gross Domestic Product) | MRKCAPGDP (Figure A4) | World Bank WDI via Refinitiv. |
Standardized form of the ASE general price index based on the share price indices of the Athens Exchange (ASE) | ASE-GI_sz (Figure A5) | Authors’ calculations based on Bank of Greece data. |
Standardized form of the price of the 10 years Greek government’s bond based on the Financial Markets, Greek Government Securities. | PRICEGR10YB_sz (Figure A5) | Authors’ calculations based on Bank of Greece data. |
Standardized form of the index prices of dwellings based on the residential Property Indices. | DWEPRIND_sz (Figure A5) | Authors’ calculations based on Bank of Greece data. |
Credit to the Non-Financial Corporations as a ratio of the GDP. | CDT-NONFGDP (Figure A6 & Model 2) | Authors’ calculations based on Bank of International Settlements via Refinitiv data. |
Credit to the Households as a ratio of the GDP. | CDT-HOUSGDP (Figure A6 & Model 2) | Authors’ calculations based on Bank of International Settlements via Refinitiv data. |
Nonperforming loans to total gross loans. Financial Soundness Indices. | NPLTGL (Figure A6) | Authors’ calculations based on International Monetary Fund (IMF) via Refinitiv data. |
Gross fixed capital formation to GDP ratio. | GFCF-GDP (Figure A6 and A8 and Model 1) | Authors’ calculations based on Hellenic Statistical Authority data. |
Loans to Non-financial corporations as a ratio of total Banking Loans. | NFI-S.11/DL (Figure A7) | Authors’ calculations based on Bank of Greece data. |
Loans to Financial institutions as a ratio of total Banking Loans. | FI-S.12/DL (Figure A7) | Authors’ calculations based on Bank of Greece data. |
Loans to the General Government as a ratio of total Banking Loans. | GG-S.13/DL (Figure A7) | Authors’ calculations based on Bank of Greece data. |
Loans to the Households & NPISH ratio of total Banking Loans. | Oth-S.1M/DL (Figure A7) | Authors’ calculations based on Bank of Greece data. |
Households and NPISH Debt Outstanding to GDP. | HDEBTOUTSGDP (Figure A8) | Authors’ calculations based on European Central Bank via Refinitiv data. |
Nonfinancial Corporations Debt Outstanding to GDP. | NFIDEBTOUTSGDP (Figure A8) | Authors’ calculations based on European Central Bank via Refinitiv data. |
Ratio of the Greek general government bonds held by domestic banks to total issued. | BGRbanks-GRGGB (Figure A9) | Authors’ calculations based on Hellenic Statistical Authority and Bank of Greece data. |
Ratio of the Greek general government bonds held by domestic banks to their total assets. | BGRbanks-TASSB (Figure A9) | Authors’ calculations based on Hellenic Statistical Authority and Bank of Greece data. |
Ratio of Net lending (+)/net borrowing (−) (B.9) of the total economy (S.1) to GDP (B.1g) | NLNDBRR/GDP-S.1 (Figure A10) | Authors’ calculations based on Hellenic Statistical Authority data. |
Ratio of Net lending (+)/net borrowing (−) (B.9) of the nonfinancial corporations (S.11) to GDP (B.1g) | NLNDBRR/GVA-S.11 (Figure A10) | Authors’ calculations based on Hellenic Statistical Authority data. |
Ratio of Net lending (+)/net borrowing (−) (B.9) of the financial sector (S.12) to GDP (B.1g) | NLNDBRR/GVA-S.12 (Figure A10) | Authors’ calculations based on Hellenic Statistical Authority data. |
Ratio of Net lending (+)/net borrowing (−) (B.9) of the general government (S.13) to GDP (B.1g) | NLNDBRR/GVA-S.13 (Figure A10) | Authors’ calculations based on Hellenic Statistical Authority data. |
Ratio of Net lending (+)/net borrowing (−) (B.9) of the households and NPISH (S.1M) to GDP (B.1g) | NLNDBRR/GVA-S.1M (Figure A10) | Authors’ calculations based on Hellenic Statistical Authority data. |
Spread between the 10 years government bond yield (r) and the growth rate of nominal GDP (g). | R-G_SNOWB (Figure A11 & Model 3) | Authors’ calculations based on Main Economic Indicators, copyright OECD via Refinitiv data. |
Interest rate margin (average interest rates on loans—deposits) of domestic banks. | interstRmrg (Figure A11) | Authors’ calculations based on Bank of Greece data. |
Greece, Portfolio investments in domestic stocks from non-residents (liabilities) | INFL-STOCKS (Figure A12) | Authors’ calculations based on Bank of Greece data. |
Greece, Portfolio investments in domestic bonds and treasury bills from non-residents (liabilities) | INFL-BONDSTB (Figure A12) | Authors’ calculations based on Bank of Greece data. |
Greece, Portfolio investments in foreign stocks from residents (requirements) | OUTFL-STOCKS (Figure A12) | Authors’ calculations based on Bank of Greece data. |
Greece, Portfolio investments in foreign bonds and treasury bills from residents (requirements) | OUTFL-BONDSTB (Figure A12) | Authors’ calculations based on Bank of Greece data. |
Greece, Balance of Payments, Balance of financial transactions, portfolio investments. | BPFT-PRTFINV (Figure A12) | Authors’ calculations based on Bank of Greece data. |
Greece, Balance of Payments, International investment position. | BP-IIP (Figure A12) | Authors’ calculations based on Bank of Greece data. |
Greece, Gross Domestic Product, Market Prices, Annualized Rate, Constant Prices, AR, 2010 Prices | realgdp10yy (model 1, 2) | Quarterly National Accounts, copyright OECD via Refinitiv. |
Discretionary policy of the expenditures of the general government (Fatás and Mihov 2003). | discrpol (model 1, 2 & 3) | Authors’ calculations based on OECD via Refinitiv and Hellenic Statistical Authority data. |
Balance of current account as a ratio of GDP. | cagdp (model 2) | OECD Economic Outlook. |
Greece, Sector Accounts, Other, Nonfinancial Corporations, Debt Outstanding to Gross Domestic Product. | s11debtgdp (model 2) | ECB (the European Central Bank) via Refinitiv. |
The growth rate of the Greek, Public Debt, General Government, Long-Term, Total, Current Prices, not seas. adj., Euro. | pudbtgr (model 2) | World Bank QPSD via Refinitiv. |
The ratio of Long Term (LT) Loans of residents (S1) from non-residents (S2) to Total LT loans of residents (S2/F42). | s1ltloanss2tot (model 2) | Authors’ calculations based on Bank of Greece data. |
Ratio of the net portfolio investments inflows to GDP. Balance of financial transactions, Balance of payments (BPM6). | nprtfinflowsgdp (model 2) | Authors’ calculations based on Bank of Greece data. |
Greece, Prices of Dwellings, Urban Areas (nsa., 1997 = 100). | hpiyoy (model 2) | Oxford Economics via Refinitiv. |
Athens stock exchange general stock price index (year-over-year). | asegspiyoy (model 2) | Athens Exchange. |
Greece, Long-Term Government Bond Yields, 10-Year, Main (Including Benchmark), Yield 10-Year Government Bonds. | gr10ygby (model 2) | OECD Main Economic Indicators via Refinitiv. |
The ratio for Greece, Money Supply M3 Outstanding Amounts, Mill. Euro to GDP. | m3outsgdp (model 3) | Authors’ calculations based on Bank of Greece data. OECD via Refinitiv for the GDP. |
The ratio (for Greece) of net lending (+) or borrowing (−) of the general government (S13) to GDP. Quarterly non-financial accounts of institutional sectors. | nlbs13gdp (model 3) | Authors’ calculations based on Hellenic Statistical Authority data. |
Social Contributions and Benefits Paid (ratio to GDP). | scbtotgdp (the dependent var. in all models) | Greece, Total Transactions (ESA 2010), Social Contributions and Benefits: Paid, Current Prices, Euro. Refinitiv/Datastream/Eurostat. |
1 | Strictly speaking, Greece, along with Italy, Spain, Portugal and Ireland, is considered to belong to the South-West Euro Area Periphery (SWEAP) as opposed to the core member countries of the Eurozone (Aizenman et al. 2013). |
2 | European System of Integrated Social Protection Statistics (ESSPROS): a nominal convergence of Greece towards EMU is reported in aggregated benefits and grouped schemes—in % of GDP; these total social transfers were, on average (stdev), 19.3% (1.4%) for Greece during 1995–2008, and for the Euro area (19 countries), 25.1% (0.4%) during 2000–2008; for Greece, 25.9% (1.0%) and for the Euro area (19 countries), 27.9% (0.3%) during 2009–2019. https://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/databrowser/view/spr_exp_gdp__custom_9184255/default/line?lang=en accessed on 17 January 2024. |
3 | So, FFH ≡ eFIH + EZFH. |
4 | Memorandum of understanding. |
5 | International Monetary Fund (IMF), European Commission (EC) and European Central Bank (ECB). |
6 | Pandemic emergency purchasing program of the European Central Bank (ECB). |
7 | Outright monetary transactions of the ECB. |
8 | Recovery and resilience fund. |
9 | In their sample of 21 OECD countries during the period 1982–2003, Luxembourg and Greece are the missing EU members. |
10 | Only the underlined categories of benefits are offered in Greece. |
11 | Resulting from wrong economic policies adopted by the European authorities, such as the OMT (outright monetary transactions) program announced by the ECB but under the condition of austerity rules imposed by the ESM (European Stability Mechanism). This was the case of the SWEAP countries. |
12 | Next-generation European Union plan. |
13 | Based on the Hellenic Statistical Authority’s (HAS’s) data and communications (https://www.statistics.gr/en/statistics/-/publication/SHE24/- accessed on 17 January 2024). The hierarchical presentation of these categories of benefits is based on the realized average payments in 2020, which is referred by the HSA as the last year of available annual data 2000–2020. |
14 | The latest available annual HSA data (Hellenic Statistical Authority) show that, on average (standard deviation), the share of pensions (age plus survivors), health and disability–incapacity in public social spending was 91% (2.1%) during the period 2000–2020; the rest was either unemployment or family benefits, with 4% (0.9%) each. |
15 | The balanced fiscal budget should, in the recession of the crisis period, be in surplus so as to find ways of repaying the sovereign debt. Harsh austerity–deflation policy… |
16 | Proxy of the “Financial development” (Choi et al. 2017). |
17 | |
18 | |
19 | “The first account in the sequence is the production account, which records the output and inputs of the production process, leaving value added as the balancing item. The value added is taken forward to the next account which is the generation of income account. Here the compensation of employees in the production process is recorded, as well as taxes due to government because of the production, so that the operating surplus (or mixed income from the self-employed of the households’ sector) can be derived as the balancing item for each sector.” (ESA 2010, p. 53). That is, the gross operating surplus (GOS) used here as a measure of the profitability of sectors does not include any financial expenses or receipts (interest or principal of a debt). |
20 | Balance of payments—international investment position. |
21 | The term ‘net lending/net borrowing’ is a sort of terminological shortcut. When the variable is positive (meaning that it shows a financing capacity), it should be called net lending (+); when it is negative (meaning that it shows a borrowing need), it should be called net borrowing (−). (ESA 2010, p. 466). |
22 | The net lending (+) or borrowing (−) of the total economy is the sum of the net lending or borrowing of the institutional sectors. It represents the net resources that the total economy makes available to the rest of the world (if it is positive) or receives from the rest of the world (if it is negative). The net lending (+) or borrowing (−) of the total economy is equal but of opposite sign to the net borrowing (−) or lending (+) of the rest of the world. (ESA 2010, p. 306). |
23 | It is not possible from macroeconomic data to “prove” whether a firm’s or household’s loan is being repaid “regularly” (hedge financing structure), or in a Eurozone country, or if only interest is being paid by firms (hyper-speculative) or not serviced at all (Ponzi). However, when the outstanding debts of the non-financial sector increase, while at the same time, it is excluded from bank credit, NPLs proliferate or, finally, the government defaults or the international investment position of the country continuously deteriorates, the evidence is sufficiently strong to characterize the sub-periods of the sample according to the Minsky classification. |
24 | Non-profit institution serving households (see, ESA 2010). |
25 | Money supply measure. |
26 | r = weighted average of the interest rate of the government’s outstanding debt; g = real gross domestic product (GDP) growth rate. |
27 | STATA/SE version 17 software has been used, provided by the University of West Attica academic license. |
28 | When we alternatively used the variable “nprtfinflowsgdp” (also drawn from the Bank of Greece dataset and balance of financial account), the estimated coefficient also statistically significant at 5% level this time had a negative sign, −0.058. |
29 | We emphasize that this is performed in a long-term equilibrium, or the series are cointegrated. |
30 | Which (old age + sickness + survivors) aggregate to an average of almost 85% of the total PSS (see, Figure A13 in Appendix A). |
31 | That have taken into account in the determinants of Equation (3). |
32 | This characterizes almost permanently the lack of international competitiveness and the respective trade balance deficit of the country. |
33 | Mergers and acquisitions. |
34 | The majority of more than 80% of the Greek production sector. |
35 | It should be stressed that the austerity–deflationary policies that were implemented (which reduced real Greek GDP by 25% and increased unemployment to 27% in the period 2008–2015) not only reduced aggregate demand but also aggregate supply due to the restructuring of sectors and markets brought about by the successive crises. |
36 | Credit rating agencies. |
37 | It is a matter of special paper(s) to reconsider democratic decision making (including economic policy) in Europe... Greece marked human history and civilization, both with “polis («πόλις»)-democracy” and with “critical thinking” who lived in ancient Greek «πόλεις» or Eastern Romanian Empire or even under Ottoman Empire and occupation, at least until 1832. So, it worked historically. Few words can be reported: the first one, (πόλις) democracy, means another way of collectiveness institutionally and functionally homologous to “truth” (i.e., that which does not wear out does not die), while the criterion in the second (critical thought), i.e., how can one distinguish right–wrong, truth–false, valid knowledge–illusion, is the “common experience” of all citizens, and not principles of utilitarian efficiency that we economists use, insisting only on the “society of needs” and not, as people worldwide demand, also the “society of human relations”. (Yannaras 2011). |
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1995–2001 | 2002–2011 | 2012–2015 | 2016–2022 | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Gross Operating Surplus Non-Financ. Firms/GDP (Figure A2) | 0.180 | 0.170 | 0.160 | 0.140 |
Gross Operating Surplus Financ. Firms/GDP (Figure A2) | 0.020 | 0.020 | 0.010 | 0.030 |
Total Net Operating Income of Credit Institutions/Net Capital (Figure A3) | 0.560 | 0.490 | 0.280 | |
Net lending (+) of Non-Financial firms (Figure A10) | 0.025 | 0.115 | 0.199 | 0.018 |
Net lending (+) of Financial firms (Figure A10) | 1.215 | 0.350 | 1.696 | 0.283 |
Net borrowing (−) of General Government (Figure A10) | −0.498 | −0.592 | −0.486 | −0.142 |
Athens Stock Exchange General Index * (Figure A5) | 0.438 | 0.595 | −0.733 | −0.832 |
Price of 10-year government bond * (Figure A5) | 0.559 | 0.242 | −1.547 | 0.253 |
Urban areas’ residential price index * (Figure A5) | −1.293 | 0.949 | −0.223 | −0.339 |
Credit to private non-financial sector/GDP (Figure A6) | 0.050 | 0.196 | 0.012 | −0.209 |
Outstanding Debt of Non-Financial Firms/GDP (Figure A8) | 0.418 | 0.565 | 0.691 | 0.633 |
Credit to Households/GDP (Figure A6) | 0.103 | 0.442 | 0.651 | 0.575 |
Outstanding Debt of Households/GDP (Figure A8) | 0.123 | 0.408 | 0.652 | 0.574 |
Non-Performing Loans/Total Gross Loans of Banks (Figure A6) | 5.403 | 27.459 | 32.780 | |
Gross Fixed Capital Formation/GDP (Figure A8) | 0.227 | 0.219 | 0.111 | 0.119 |
Current Account/GDP | −0.047 | −0.102 | −0.018 | −0.044 |
International Investment Position # (Figure A12) | −184 | −229 | −274 | |
Snowball Effect (Figure A11) | 0.055 | 0.034 | 0.134 | 0.026 |
Variable | Obs | Mean | Std. Dev. | Min | Max |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
scbtotgdp (the dependent var.) | 97 | 0.4284 | 0.05 | 0.34 | 0.52 |
invgdp (model 1) | 113 | 0.1803 | 0.06 | 0.08 | 0.29 |
realgdp10yy (model 1, 2) | 114 | 0.0126 | 0.08 | −0.43 | 0.22 |
discrpol (model 1, 2 & 3) | 109 | 0.0000 | 0.04 | −0.11 | 0.09 |
goss11gdp (model 1) | 97 | 0.1601 | 0.02 | 0.10 | 0.20 |
goss12gdp (model 1) | 97 | 0.0187 | 0.01 | 0.00 | 0.04 |
credtnfgdp (model 2) | 112 | 0.5278 | 0.14 | 0.29 | 0.72 |
credthgdp (model 2) | 112 | 0.4201 | 0.22 | 0.06 | 0.67 |
cagdp (model 2) | 102 | −0.0604 | 0.06 | −0.19 | 0.12 |
s11debtgdp (model 2) | 95 | 0.5879 | 0.10 | 0.37 | 0.73 |
pudbtgr (model 2) | 87 | 0.0079 | 0.03 | −0.20 | 0.10 |
s1ltloanss2tot (model 2) | 102 | 0.4662 | 0.18 | 0.15 | 0.78 |
nprtfinflowsgdp (model 2) | 85 | −0.0214 | 0.13 | −0.79 | 0.23 |
hpiyoy (model 2) | 109 | 0.0350 | 0.08 | −0.13 | 0.16 |
asegspiyoy (model 2) | 108 | 0.0700 | 0.39 | −0.66 | 1.67 |
gr10ygby (model 2) | 104 | 0.0653 | 0.05 | 0.01 | 0.25 |
m3outsgdp (model 3) | 108 | 3.7618 | 0.55 | 2.68 | 5.29 |
nlbs13gdp (model 3) | 97 | −0.0648 | 0.06 | −0.31 | 0.06 |
rgsnowb (model 3) | 103 | 0.0508 | 0.06 | −0.07 | 0.26 |
Model 1 | Model 2a | Model 2b | Model 2c | Model 3 | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Profitability | Risky options + financial developm. | Openness and indebtedness—leverage | Inflated asset prices and foreign fund exposure | Animal spirits “paid” by the gov. | |
D.scbtotgdp | 1999q4–2022q3 | 2007q4–2022q3 | 2001q1–2021q4 | 1999q4–2021q4 | 1999q4–2022q1 |
Panel A. Long-term (cointegrated) estimations | |||||
(Priv. Fix. Investm.)/GDP | −0.148 *** | ||||
Real GDP growth r. | −0.224 *** | −0.306 *** | −0.248 *** | −0.250 *** | |
Discret. Pol. | 0.204 ** | 0.279 ** | 0.087 * | 0.110 ** | |
(Gross Operat. Surpl. Non-Fin. Sect.)/GDP | −0.418 ** | ||||
(Gross Operat. Surpl. Financ. Sect.)/GDP | −0.961 ** | ||||
(Credit to Non-Fin. Sect.)/GDP | 0.272 *** | ||||
(Credit to Households and NPISH)/GDP | 0.075 *** | ||||
(Current Account)/GDP | −0.180 ** | −0.341 *** | |||
(Outstand. Debt Non-Fin. Sect.)/GDP | 0.152 *** | 0.176 *** | |||
Growth rate of thePublic debt | −0.093 ** | ||||
(LT loans Non-Fin. sect. from external sect.)/(Tot. LT loans)28 | 0.057 ** | 0.107 *** | |||
Housing price index growth (yoy) | 0.062 * | ||||
Athens Exch. gen. sh. pr. index (yoy) | 0.019 *** | ||||
GR gov. 10 y. Bond Yield | 0.140 *** | ||||
(M3 Outst.)/GDP | 0.011 ** | ||||
(Gen. Gov. net Lend. or Borr.)/GDP | −0.119 *** | ||||
Snowball eff. (r-g). | 0.223 *** | ||||
Trend | 0.0005 ** | 0.0009 *** | 0.001 *** | 0.001 *** | |
Constant | 0.3640 *** | 0.256 *** | 0.172 *** | 0.173 *** | 0.129 *** |
Panel B. Diagnostic Statistics | |||||
Bounds test (H0: no level relationship) | reject at 1% level | reject at 1% level | reject at 1% level | reject at 1% level | reject at 1% level |
Adjustment EC Term: L.scbtotgdp | −0.856 *** | −0.757 *** | −1.127 *** | −1.512 *** | −1.028 *** |
Ramsey RESET F-test (H0: Model has no omitted variables) | Prob > F = 0.2182 | Prob > F = 0.5505 | Prob > F = 0.4110 | Prob > F = 0.0826 | Prob > F = 0.1404 |
Breusch–Godfrey LM test for AR (H0: no serial correlation) | Prob > chi2 = 0.2852 | Prob > chi2 = 0.3143 | Prob > chi2 = 0.7718 | Prob > chi2 = 0.2268 | Prob > chi2 = 0.3592 |
Breusch–Pagan/Cook–Weisberg test (H0: Constant variance) | Prob > chi2 = 0.2574 | Prob > chi2 = 0.7495 | Prob > chi2 = 0.7341 | Prob > chi2 = 0.9560 | Prob > chi2 = 0.7774 |
Mean VIF | 4.18 | 5.71 | 7.57 | 9.46 | 4.12 |
Observations | 92 | 60 | 84 | 89 | 90 |
Adj R-squared | 0.8099 | 0.8825 | 0.8177 | 0.8437 | 0.7959 |
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Kyriakopoulos, D.; Yfantopoulos, J.; Stamatopoulos, T. Financial Fragility and Public Social Spending: Unraveling the Endogenous Nexus. J. Risk Financial Manag. 2024, 17, 235. https://doi.org/10.3390/jrfm17060235
Kyriakopoulos D, Yfantopoulos J, Stamatopoulos T. Financial Fragility and Public Social Spending: Unraveling the Endogenous Nexus. Journal of Risk and Financial Management. 2024; 17(6):235. https://doi.org/10.3390/jrfm17060235
Chicago/Turabian StyleKyriakopoulos, Dionysios, John Yfantopoulos, and Theodoros Stamatopoulos. 2024. "Financial Fragility and Public Social Spending: Unraveling the Endogenous Nexus" Journal of Risk and Financial Management 17, no. 6: 235. https://doi.org/10.3390/jrfm17060235
APA StyleKyriakopoulos, D., Yfantopoulos, J., & Stamatopoulos, T. (2024). Financial Fragility and Public Social Spending: Unraveling the Endogenous Nexus. Journal of Risk and Financial Management, 17(6), 235. https://doi.org/10.3390/jrfm17060235