2021
DOI: 10.1111/meca.12358
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Household debt and macroeconomic stability: An empirical stock‐flow consistent model for the Danish economy

Abstract: This paper addresses the issue of household debt in the Danish economy. We develop a large‐scale stock‐flow consistent model. The model has five main sectors namely, household, firms, financial corporations, government, and the rest of the world sectors. We use the model to explore the macroeconomic stability of the Danish economy, given the recent level of household debt. We fit the model to annual data from 1998 to 2016, estimate the structural parameters, and simulate the model for a baseline scenario, agai… Show more

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Cited by 6 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…The country utilizes hydropower resources and has established large metal, chemical, and paper mills. In addition, Denmark maintains a relatively stable financial system that can allocate resources efficiently, assess and manage risks, and maintain employment levels based on the economy's natural rate (Byrialsen & Raza, 2022). To understand the effect of financial stability on environmental deregulation, we first establish that Denmark's economy is financially stable.…”
Section: Theoretical Backgroundmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The country utilizes hydropower resources and has established large metal, chemical, and paper mills. In addition, Denmark maintains a relatively stable financial system that can allocate resources efficiently, assess and manage risks, and maintain employment levels based on the economy's natural rate (Byrialsen & Raza, 2022). To understand the effect of financial stability on environmental deregulation, we first establish that Denmark's economy is financially stable.…”
Section: Theoretical Backgroundmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The dynamics of prices in relation to wages and employment, even though appear in earlier publications, have not received much attention in a coherent and comprehensive modelling framework within the PK tradition, as inflation was not a major concern until recently. Some recent empirical SFC models such as, Zezza and Zezza (2020), Pierros (2021), Valdecantos (2022), Mazier and Reyes (2022), Canelli et al (2022), Muysken and Meijers (2022), and Byrialsen and Raza (2022) endogenise prices and wages, but do not investigate in depth the dynamics of inflation and the labour market. The resurgence of inflation in the Western world calls for a thorough investigation of this issue.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%