1. Macroeconomic Effects of Credit Deepening in Latin America
- Author
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Eduardo Zilberman, Nilda Mercedes Cabrera Pasca, Carlos Carvalho, and Laura Souza
- Subjects
Public Finance, Financial Policy, Microbusinesses & Microfinance, Credit deepening, Consignado credit, Financial frictions, Payroll lending ,Consumption (economics) ,History ,Stylized fact ,Economics and Econometrics ,Polymers and Plastics ,General equilibrium theory ,jel:E51 ,jel:E44 ,Monetary economics ,International economics ,jel:E20 ,Investment (macroeconomics) ,Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering ,Credit history ,Accounting ,Public Finance, Financial Policy, Microbusinesses & Microfinance, Credit deepening, Financial frictions, Consignado credit, Payroll lending, Financial frictions ,Economics ,Credit crunch ,Business and International Management ,Constraint (mathematics) ,Finance ,Public finance - Abstract
This paper augments a relatively standard dynamic general equilibrium model with financial frictions in order to quantify the macroeconomic effects of the credit deepening process observed in many Latin American (LA) countries in the last decade, most notably in Brazil. In the model, a stylized banking sector intermediates credit from patient households to impatient households and firms. The key novelty of the paper, motivated by the Brazilian experience, is to model the credit constraint faced by (impatient) households as a function of future labor income. In the calibrated model, credit deepening generates only modest abovetrend growth in consumption, investment, and GDP. Since Brazil has experienced one of the most intense credit deepening processes in Latin America, it is argued that the quantitative effects for other LA economies are unlikely to be sizeable.
- Published
- 2022