Publication Type
Journal Article
Version
acceptedVersion
Publication Date
1-2025
Abstract
This paper applies the growth-at-risk framework proposed by Adrian et al. (2019) to Singapore, an international financial centre whereby financial shocks are intermediated away quickly. We gauge near-term risks around growth projections taken from the survey of professional forecasters by accounting for financial stress in both local and global financial markets, as well as worldwide economic uncertainty. The conditioning variables are first linked to future growth through quantile regressions, and the estimated quantiles are fitted with skew t-distributions to produce full predictive distributions. Scenario analysis reveals that greater local financial strain tends to widen the uncertainty of growth outlook, higher global financial stress portends more severe recessions, while increased uncertainty in the economic policy environment dampens the intensity of economic booms. We also document higher average log predictive scores for conditional distributions compared to unconditional ones when projecting one and two quarters ahead. Our empirical results underscore the importance of incorporating the influence of foreign vulnerabilities in addition to domestic ones to assess short-term growth risk in an international financial centre like Singapore.
Keywords
Growth-at-risk, Financial stress, Economic policy uncertainty, Foreign vulnerabilities
Discipline
Asian Studies | Econometrics | Finance
Research Areas
Applied Microeconomics
Publication
Empirical Economics
Volume
68
Issue
5
First Page
2199
Last Page
2224
ISSN
0377-7332
Identifier
10.1007/s00181-024-02705-w
Publisher
Springer
Citation
CHOW-TAN, Hwee Kwan.
Gauging growth risk in an international financial centre: Some evidence from Singapore. (2025). Empirical Economics. 68, (5), 2199-2224.
Available at: https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/soe_research/2836
Copyright Owner and License
Authors
Creative Commons License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0 International License.
Additional URL
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00181-024-02705-w