Description Usage Format Details Author(s) Source References See Also Examples
A data.frame
identifying which of 70 countries had a
banking crisis each year 1800:2010. The first column is
year
. The remaining columns carry the names of the
countries; those columns are 1 for years with banking
crises and 0 otherwise.
1 |
A data.frame
This file was created using the following command:
bankingCrises <- readFinancialCrisisFiles(FinancialCrisisFiles)
This is documented further in the help file for
readFinancialCrisisFiles
.
This is an update of a subset of the data used to create Figure 10.1. Capital Mobility and the Incidence of Banking Crises, All Countries, 1800-2008, Reinhart and Rogoff (2009, p. 156).
The general upward trend visible in a plot of these data may be attributed to at least two different factors:
(1) The gradual increase in the proportion of human labor that is monetized.
(2) An increase in the general ability of cronies of those in power to gamble with other people's money in forming and bankrupting financial institutions. The marked feature of this plot is the virtual absence of banking crises during the period of the Bretton Woods agreement, 1944 to 1971. This period ended when US President Nixon in effect canceled the Bretton Woods agreement by taking the US off the silver standard.
Spencer Graves
http://www.reinhartandrogoff.com
Carmen M. Reinhart and Kenneth S. Rogoff (2009) This Time Is Different: Eight Centuries of Financial Folly, Princeton U. Pr.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 | data(bankingCrises)
numberOfCrises <- rowSums(bankingCrises[-1], na.rm=TRUE)
plot(bankingCrises$year, numberOfCrises, type='b')
# Write to a file for Wikimedia Commons
svg('bankingCrises.svg')
plot(bankingCrises$year, numberOfCrises, type='b', cex.axis=2,
las=1, xlab='', ylab='', bty='n', cex=0.5)
abline(v=c(1945, 1971), lty='dashed', col='blue')
text(1958, 14, 'Bretton Woods', srt=90, cex=2, col='blue')
dev.off()
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