The Great Financial Crisis in Finland and Sweden
Preview

Hardback

The Great Financial Crisis in Finland and Sweden

The Nordic Experience of Financial Liberalization

9781848443051 Edward Elgar Publishing
Edited by Lars Jonung, Professor Emeritus, Department of Economics, Lund University, Sweden, Jaakko Kiander, Finnish Centre for Pensions, Finland and Pentti Vartia, Research Institute of the Finnish Economy, ETLA, Helsinki, Finland
Publication Date: 2009 ISBN: 978 1 84844 305 1 Extent: 352 pp
The book compares and contrasts the experiences of Finland and Sweden, then adopts an international perspective, encompassing the experiences of Asia, Latin America, Denmark and Norway. Lessons from the 1990s crisis are drawn, and possible solutions prescribed. The conclusion is that long-term effects of financial crises – financial liberalization and integration – are not as dramatic as the short-term effects, but may prove to be of greater importance over time. Only the future will show whether these long-term benefits will balance or even outweigh the enormous short-term costs of the crises.

Copyright & permissions

Recommend to librarian

Your Details

Privacy Policy

Librarian Details

Download leaflet

Print page

More Information
Critical Acclaim
Contributors
Contents
More Information
Following World War II, Nordic countries were commonly regarded as successful and stable economies. This perception was, however, shattered in the early 1990s when Finland and Sweden encountered severe financial crises. Here, the authors explore the symptoms of financial crisis – decreasing real income, soaring unemployment and exploding public deficits – and their devastating effects.

The book compares and contrasts the experiences of Finland and Sweden, then adopts an international perspective, encompassing the experiences of Asia, Latin America, Denmark and Norway. Lessons from the 1990s crisis are drawn, and possible solutions prescribed. The conclusion is that long-term effects of financial crises – financial liberalization and integration – are not as dramatic as the short-term effects, but may prove to be of greater importance over time. Only the future will show whether these long-term benefits will balance or even outweigh the enormous short-term costs of the crises.

Highly relevant to the current international financial crisis currently afflicting the world economy, this timely book will prove invaluable to economists and other social scientists with a general interest in financial crises, and to those with a more specific interest in the evolution and models of Scandinavian economies.
Critical Acclaim
‘The Nordic financial crisis had it all: a botched liberalization, a huge boom followed by an even bigger bust, massive taxpayer-financed bailouts and, finally, deep long-run gains. The first-class team of scholars mobilized in this book convincingly tell a story that should be carefully studied by economists, bankers and policymakers. After this book, no one should be able to say: “If we only knew”!’
– Charles Wyplosz, Graduate Institute of International Studies, Geneva, Switzerland

‘The financial crisis in Scandinavia in the early 1990s was a forerunner of the later world-wide crisis in 2007/8. Although the initial causation was different, the impact on their banks, though more localised, was just as severe. So we can benefit, and already policymakers have done so, from learning the lessons in this book on how to restore shattered banking systems to health. For this we owe a debt of gratitude to the editors, who have put together a series of key papers that emerged from a much larger exercise on the crisis that was earlier reported in four volumes in Swedish and Finnish. Amongst the many studies on current and past financial crises, this is a classic “must-read”.’
– Charles A.E. Goodhart, London School of Economics, UK

‘The Nordic experience with financial crisis resolution could not be more timely. Everyone cites it as an example of “how it should be done”, but rarely does one find careful and detailed analysis. Now policymakers and others searching for guidance will know where to look.’
– Barry Eichengreen, University of California, Berkeley, US
Contributors
Contributors: P. Englund, K. Fregert, T. Hagberg, L. Jonung, J. Kiander, A. Kokko, J. Pehkonen, L. Schuknecht, E. Steigum, K. Suzuki, M. Tujula, P. Vartia, C. Vastrup, V. Vihriälä
Contents
Contents:

Preface

1. Introduction
Lars Jonung, Jaakko Kiander and Pentti Vartia

PART I: THE CRISIS OF THE 1990s IN FINLAND AND SWEDEN
2. The Great Financial Crisis in Finland and Sweden: The Dynamics of Boom, Bust and Recovery 1985–2000
Lars Jonung, Jaakko Kiander and Pentti Vartia

3. Financial Crisis in Finland and Sweden: Similar But Not Quite the Same
Peter Englund and Vesa Vihriälä

4. The Crisis of the 1990s and Unemployment in Finland and Sweden
Klas Fregert and Jaakko Pehkonen

5. How Costly was the Crisis in Finland and Sweden?
Thomas Hagberg and Lars Jonung

PART II: THE INTERNATIONAL CONTEXT
6. The Boom and Bust Cycle in Finland and Sweden in an International Perspective
Lars Jonung, Ludger Schuknecht and Mika Tujula

7. The Boom and Bust Cycle in Norway
Erling Steigum

8. How did Denmark Avoid a Banking Crisis?
Claus Vastrup

9. The Nordic and Asian Crises: Common Causes, Different Outcomes
Ari Kokko and Kenji Suzuki

PART III: LESSONS FROM THE NORDIC CRISES
10. Twelve Lessons from the Nordic Experience of Financial Liberalization
Lars Jonung

Index
eBook for individuals
978 1 84980 213 0
From £25.00
Click here for options
eBook for library purchase
978 1 84980 213 0
View sample chapter and check access on:
eBook options

Available for individuals to buy from these websites

Or recommend to your institution to acquire on Elgaronline
  • Buy as part of an eBook subject collection - flexible options available
  • Downloading and printing allowed
  • No limits on concurrent user access, ideal for course use
My Cart