Castro, Vitor Martins, Rodrigo The collapse of credit booms: A competing risks analysis This paper analyses the collapse of credit booms by using a discrete-time competing risks duration model over a panel of 67 countries for the period 1975q1-2016q4 to disentangle the factors behind the length of benign and harmful credit booms. The results show that economic growth and monetary authorities play the major role in explaining the differences in the length and outcome of credit booms. While more growth contributes to longer booms that are more likely to land softly, higher interest rates and central bank independence cut credit booms short but make hard landings more likely. Moreover, we found that the longer a credit boom lasts the more likely it is to end in a systemic banking crisis. Although both types of credit expansions have an increasing probability of ending, as they grow older - exhibiting positive duration dependence - hard landing credit booms have proven to be statistically longer. Economics;Credit booms;Duration analysis;Competing risks model;Multinomial logit;Central Bank independence;Economics 2019-12-09
    https://repository.lboro.ac.uk/articles/journal_contribution/The_collapse_of_credit_booms_A_competing_risks_analysis/11323679