Chi-Hung Chang
Feng Chia University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Chi-Hung Chang.
European Journal of Finance | 2014
Tsangyao Chang; Chien-Chiang Lee; Chi-Hung Chang
This study applies the bootstrap panel Granger causality test to test whether insurance activity promotes economic growth, using data from 10 OECD countries over the period of 1979–2006. Empirical results indicate that one-way Granger causality running from all insurance activities to economic growth for France, Japan, Netherlands, Switzerland, and the UK, and economic growth Granger causes insurance activities in Canada (for life insurance), Italy (for total and life insurance) and the USA (for total and non-life insurance). There is a two-way Granger causality between life insurance activity and economic growth in the USA, while no causality between insurance activities and economic growth is found in Belgium (for all insurance), Canada (for total and non-life insurance), Italy (for non-life insurance) and Sweden (for life insurance). Our results also confirm the finding of Ward and Zurbruegg [Does insurance promote economic growth? Evidence from OECD economies. Journal of Risk and Insurance 67, no. 4: 489–506] showing that the insurance–growth nexus varies across countries, since their paper have previously demonstrated heterogeneity in this vein. In an analysis of a broader, though overlapping 17-country sample and taking into account banking activities, the results suggest the importance of including banking activities when investigating the insurance–growth relationship.
The North American Journal of Economics and Finance | 2013
Chien-Chiang Lee; Mei-Ping Chen; Chi-Hung Chang
Abstract Different from prior studies which concentrate on the unidirectional impact of industry leading, this study examines the bi-directional dynamical causal relation between industry returns and stock market returns by considering multiple structural breaks for ten major eastern and southern Asia countries. Our results show that finance and consumer service industry returns have significant power in explaining the movements of market returns. Further, we apply logit regressions to explore the determinants of the leading hypotheses and find exchange rate and interest rate are important in explaining the industry–market nexus. In a developed market the industry and the market have feedback relations, but in a highly controlled economy the influence from the stock market dominates.
European Journal of Finance | 2013
Chien-Chiang Lee; Ching-Chuan Tsong; Shih-Jui Yang; Chi-Hung Chang
This article explores whether there is support for the stationarity hypotheses of life and non-life insurance premiums during the period 1979–2007 for 40 heterogeneous countries. The stationarity of insurance premiums affects insurance companies’ prediction on their future inflow of premium income, which affects the liquidity of insurance companies and their investment plans and thus is relevant to the insurers’ operation. This article employs the advanced nonlinear panel unit-root test with a sequential panel selection method to classify the entire panel into two groups: stationary countries and non-stationary countries. We apply Monte Carlo simulations to derive empirical distributions of the test, which allows us to correct for the finite-sample bias and to consider the cross-country effects. We find relatively stationary life insurance premiums in countries from the following groups: high-income, Europe, and common law origin; relatively stationary non-life insurance premiums exist in the following groups: low-income, Middle East and Africa, and common law origin. Evidence herein shows that different classifications, including income levels, geographic regions, regionally or economically integrated blocs, and legal system, affect the stationarity of life and non-life insurance premiums.
Journal of Business Economics and Management | 2011
Chien-Chiang Lee; Mei-Ping Chen; Chun-An Li; Chi-Hung Chang
This paper examines the critical determinants of American depository receipt (ADR) returns before and after domestic stock seasoned equity offerings (SEOs) for Asian and Latin American emerging economies during 1990--2007, which has never been probed in related issues. We employ the Time Series Cross Section Regressions and General Method of Moments methods to document that domestic stock returns play a vital role in explaining Latin American ADR returns, while US investor sentiment is crucial in explaining Asian ADR returns. Local investor sentiment is found to be considerably important than domestic stock returns in Asian ADR returns, while Latin American local investor sentiment (US investor sentiment) is more important before (after) domestic stock SEOs. The results do not support the view that ADR-reconciled earnings per share (EPS) and stock EPS provide significant information to explain ADR returns in Latin American and Asian emerging markets both before and after SEOs. Furthermore, international market differences in a specific geography should be considered when diversifying investments and efficiency accounting communication with accounting convergence does not need to be emphasized.
Geneva Risk and Insurance Review | 2012
Chi-Hung Chang; Chien-Chiang Lee
The North American Journal of Economics and Finance | 2014
Chien-Chiang Lee; Shih-Jui Yang; Chi-Hung Chang
Journal of International Money and Finance | 2013
Chien-Chiang Lee; Yi-Bin Chiu; Chi-Hung Chang
Geneva Papers on Risk and Insurance-issues and Practice | 2012
Chien-Chiang Lee; Chi-Hung Chang
Economic Modelling | 2016
Chien-Chiang Lee; Chi-Hung Chang; Mohamed El Hedi Arouri; Chi-Chuan Lee
International Review of Economics & Finance | 2015
Chien-Chiang Lee; Chi-Hung Chang
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National Kaohsiung First University of Science and Technology
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