Abstract

The importance of a sound and stable financial system and by extension economic stability was brought to the fore by the global financial crisis (GFC). The economic and social costs of the GFC have renewed the commitment of stakeholders in the financial sector including central banks to develop instruments and methodologies that will be useful in monitoring financial stress within the financial system and the real economy. This study contributes to the growing literature by developing a financial stress indicator for the South African financial market. The financial stress indicator (FSI) is a single aggregate indicator that is constructed to reflect the systemic nature of financial instability and also to measure the vulnerability of the financial system to both internal and external shocks. Using the principal component analysis (PCA), the results show that financial stress can be identified by the financial stress indicator. Furthermore, using a recursive Vector Autoregression (VAR) model to estimate the impact of financial stress on output and investment, the result shows that financial stress has a negative impact on economic growth and investment, though not immediately. FSI is very useful for gauging the effectiveness of government measures to mitigate the impact of financial stress. Concerted effort to stimulate investment and domestic production by relevant stakeholders is necessary to mitigate the impact of financial stress. This will go a long way to alleviating the impact of the financial stress on industrial production, employment and the economy at large.

Highlights

  • Using the principal component analysis (PCA), the results show that financial stress can be identified by the financial stress indicator

  • The importance of a sound and stable financial system and by extension economic stability was brought to the fore by the global financial crisis (GFC)

  • The financial stress indicator (FSI) constructed for the South African financial system using the variance-equal weight (VEW) method as well as the PCA and the results are presented in this sub-section

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Summary

Introduction

The importance of a sound and stable financial system and by extension economic stability was brought to the fore by the global financial crisis (GFC). The aftermath of the GFC on the financial system has led most central banks across the world to rethink and develop instruments and methodologies that will be useful in identifying, assessing and monitoring potential threats to the stability of the financial system and the economy as a whole (Ilesanmi and Tewari 2019a). The GFC has shown that correlations across assets and banks’ balance can abruptly rise, thereby causing systemic failure within the financial system (Alberola et al 2011). According to Liao et al (2015), systemic risk is endogenously created within the financial system due to exposure of banks to common macroeconomic factors and contagion through interbank linkages. Identification of a potential threat is important to put in place measures to mitigate its impact (Ilesanmi and Tewari 2019a)

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