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Words: | Submitted: Tue Jun 24 2003
... frequency of such crises and finally examine the extent to which these financial system characteristics that make it prone to crises are inherent on the capitalist system. The first question, i.e. the frequency of financial crises partly depends on our definition of crisis. A financial crisis has been defined by Goldsmith as "a sharp, brief, ultra-cyclical deterioration of all or most of a group of financial indicators - short-term interest rates, asset (stock, real estate, land) prices, commercial insolvencies and failures of financial institutions". The question here is of what intensity and/or intersectoral spread should a financial disturbance be in order to be considered a crisis. In any case, it appears that though major crises leading to the (near) collapse of the financial system are quite rare (the only one being 1929 in the US), more moderate ones are frequent enough to allow the argument that the financial system does suffer ...
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