Systematic financial risk monitoring and early warning method has been an important research field since the global financial crisis in 2008, and new technologies and methods are constantly emerging. This paper analyzes the early warning and monitoring methods of systematic financial risks before the Asian financial crisis from 65438 to 0997, between the Asian financial crisis and the international financial crisis in 2008 and after the international financial crisis in 2008, and makes a comparative analysis of these methods. The author believes that the monitoring and early warning methods of systemic financial risks that have been formed in the world have important reference significance for establishing and perfecting the monitoring and early warning mechanism of systemic financial risks in China, and should be creatively expanded in combination with the development stages of China's financial industry and financial market.
Systematic financial risk monitoring and early warning method has been an important research field since the global financial crisis in 2008, and new technologies and methods are constantly emerging. According to the time division, the systematic financial risk monitoring and early warning methods can be divided into three development stages, showing the characteristics from simple to complex, from static to dynamic, from linear to nonlinear, from local to systematic. Since the financial crisis in 2008, the research and analysis of systemically important institutions, system correlation and risk contagion have also been highly valued. Different monitoring and early warning methods have their own advantages and disadvantages, and the final method depends on the development of a country's financial market, the completeness of data and information statistics and the financial supervision system. Based on the Asian financial crisis and the international financial crisis in 2008, this paper divides the research and development of systematic financial risk monitoring and early warning methods into three stages, and describes and compares the main risk early warning and monitoring methods in each period.