“…Following the same intuition of the analysis of aggregate credit risk, it is also crucially important to investigate potential heterogeneous effects during periods of expansions and contractions and to distinguish between normal periods versus financial crises. Notwithstanding the credit-risk analysis of Table 3 failing to provide evidence that contemporaneous business-cycle conditions modulate the effect of deficits, banking crises, in particular, are also shown to predict persistent credit contractions and output gaps (Baron et al (2020)). To investigate whether the main effect of fiscal deficits is significantly different in periods of economic crisis, I include i) %ΔPCGDP c,t  DEFICIT c,t , as in equation ( 4); ii) RET BVX c,t , the absolute value of the drop in bank equity prices documented by Baron et al (2020); and iii) I LV c,t , a dummy variable coded as 1 if the country-year in question has experienced either a banking, currency, or sovereign-debt crisis, as documented by Valencia (2014, 2018), and 0 otherwise.…”