Title :
Global contagion of the U.S. financial crisis: An exploratory spatial data analysis
Author :
Wu, Zhanyun ; Ji, Minhe ; Su, Hailong
Author_Institution :
Key Lab. of Geogr. Inf. Sci., East China Normal Univ., Shanghai, China
Abstract :
The global financial crisis originated from U.S. sub-prime loans and eventually became a global, systemic financial crisis that had swept the world´s financial markets. However, the spatiotemporal pattern of the spread suggests no physical proximity alone able to provide sufficient explanation for the contagion process. The present study adapted the exploratory spatial data analysis by extending the concept of space from being purely physical to socioeconomic. Research results indicated that the contagion presented signs of dependence in both physical and socioeconomic space, with the latter having much stronger and more significant effects than the former. Such dependence is exactly a manifestation of the net contagion effect of a financial crisis transmission mechanism, a concept proposed by Masson and rarely verified in other studies.
Keywords :
data analysis; financial management; socio-economic effects; US financial crisis; exploratory spatial data analysis; financial crisis transmission mechanism; global contagion process; global financial crisis; net contagion effect; socioeconomic space; systemic financial crisis; world financial markets; Correlation; Data analysis; Econometrics; Exchange rates; Indexes; Spatial databases; contagion effect; financial crisis; socioeconomic space; spatial dependence;
Conference_Titel :
Geoinformatics, 2011 19th International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Shanghai
Print_ISBN :
978-1-61284-849-5
DOI :
10.1109/GeoInformatics.2011.5981078