References
- Ahlquist, John, and Ben Ansell. 2014. “Does Inequality Induce More Borrowing? Electoral Institutions and Responses to Economic Polarization. Manuscript“. University of Wisconsin, Madison and University of Oxford, UK.
- Barth, J. R., G. Caprio, and R. Levine. 2013. “Bank Regulation and Supervision in 180 Countries from 1999 to 2011.” Journal Of Financial Economic Policy 5 (2): 111-219. doi: 10.1108/17576381311329661.
- Bordo, M. D., and C. M. Meissner. 2012. “Does Inequality Lead to a Financial Crisis?” Journal of International Money and Finance 31 (8): 2147–2161. doi:10.1016/j.jimonfin.2012.05.006.
- Coibion, O., Y. Gorodnichenko, M. Kudlyak, and J. Mondragon. 2014. Does Greater Inequality Lead to More Household Borrowing? New Evidence from Household Data. NBER Working Paper No.19850. doi: 10.3386/w19850.
- Góes, C. 2016. Testing Piketty’s Hypothesis on the Drivers of Income Inequality: Evidence from Panel VARs with Heterogeneous Dynamics. IMF Working Paper WP/16/160: International Monetary Fund. 16 1 doi:10.5089/9781475523249.001
- Gu, X., and B. Huang. 2014. “Does Inequality Lead to a Financial Crisis? Revisited.” Review of Development Economics 18 (3): 502–516. doi:10.1111/rode.12099.
- Kumhof, Michael, Romain Rancière, and Pablo Winant. 2015. “Inequality, Leverage, and Crises.” American Economic Review 105 (3): 1217-45. doi: 10.1257/aer.20110683.
- Pedroni, P. 2013. “Structural Panel VARs.” Econometrics 1 (2): 180–206. doi:10.3390/econometrics1020180.
- Perugini, C., J. Hölscher, and S. Collie. 2016. “Inequality, Credit Expansion and Financial Crises.” Cambridge Journal of Economics 40 (1): 227–257. doi:10.1093/cje/beu075.
- Rajan, R. G. 2010. Fault Lines: How Hidden Fractures Still Threaten the World Economy : Princeton University Press.
- Stefani, A. (2015) “Debt, Inequality and House Prices: Explaining the Dynamics of Household Borrowing Prior to the Great Recession,” Edinburgh School of Economics Discussion Paper Series No. 259.
- Thompson, J. (2016) “Do Rising Top Incomes Lead to Increased Borrowing in the Rest of the Distribution?” Finance and Economics Discussion Series 2016–046, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System.
- Yamarik, S., M. El Shagi, and G. Yamashiro. 2016. “Does Inequality Lead to Credit Growth? Testing the Rajan Hypothesis Using State-Level Data.” Economics Letters 148: 63–67. doi:10.1016/j.econlet.2016.09.004.