690 results on '"Credit supply"'
Search Results
2. Cyclical lending standards: A structural analysis
- Author
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Chen, Kaiji, Higgins, Patrick, and Zha, Tao
- Published
- 2021
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3. Ad hoc bank taxation and credit supply.
- Author
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Volk, Matjaž
- Subjects
BANK loans ,LOANS ,CAPITAL levy ,CREDIT control ,CAPITAL stock ,BANK capital - Abstract
This paper studies the introduction of new temporary taxation on banks and its effects on banks' lending decisions. Focusing on a unique policy experiment in Slovenia in 2011, where the government imposed a 0.1% tax on banks' total assets, I find that the introduction of the tax resulted in a lower credit supply of loans to corporates. In particular, for each percentage point increase in the share of tax in the capital, banks charge, on average, 8 basis points higher lending rates and decrease their lending amount by 0.5%. The findings of this research carry strong policy implications for countries contemplating or having already implemented windfall or other temporary taxes on banks. The introduction of the tax might lead to a reduction in lending beyond what would be warranted from the standpoint of monetary or other policies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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4. 银行数字化发展能助力小微企业纾困解难吗 --来自城商行的经验证据.
- Author
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宁薛平, 莫立颖, and 张庆君
- Abstract
Copyright of Nankai Business Review is the property of Nankai Business Review Editorial Office and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
5. Bank Lending Standards and the U.S. Economy.
- Author
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Broadbent, Elijah, Ennis, Huberto M., Pike, Tyler J., and Sapriza, Horacio
- Subjects
BANK loans ,MACROECONOMICS ,PORTFOLIO management (Investments) ,PRICE inflation ,INTEREST rates - Abstract
The provision of bank credit to firms and households affects macroeconomic performance. We use survey measures of changes in bank lending standards, disaggregated by loan category, to quantify the effect of changes in banks’ attitudes toward lending on aggregate output, inflation, and interest rates. Bank lending to businesses is particularly important for macroeconomic outcomes, with peak effects on output of around half a percentage point after four quarters of the initial shock. These effects depend on the stage of the business cycle and the proximity of the short-term interest rate to its effective lower bound. The effects are larger when output is growing below trend and when the interest rate is away from its lower bound. We also find that the response of the economy to lending-standards shocks is asymmetric, with tightening shocks having larger effects on output. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
6. Did High Leverage Render Small Businesses Vulnerable to the COVID‐19 Shock?
- Author
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BRÄUNING, FALK, FILLAT, JOSÉ L., and WANG, J. CHRISTINA
- Subjects
SMALL business ,FINANCIAL leverage ,BANK capital ,BANK loans ,SMALL business loans ,SMALL business finance ,COVID-19 pandemic - Abstract
Using supervisory data on small and midsized nonfinancial enterprises (SMEs), we find that those SMEs with higher leverage faced tighter constraints in accessing bank credit after the COVID‐19 outbreak in spring 2020. Specifically, SMEs with higher pre‐COVID leverage obtained a smaller volume of new loans and had to pay a higher spread on them during the pandemic period. Consistent with an inward shift in loan supply, these effects were concentrated in loans originated by banks with below‐median capital buffers. Highly levered SMEs that relied on low‐capital large banks for funding before the pandemic were not able to substitute to other sources of debt financing and thus experienced more of a reduction in total debt as well as a decline in investment and employment. On the other hand, the unprecedented public support, especially the Paycheck Protection Program (PPP), mitigated the adverse real effect stemming from bank credit constraints. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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7. HOW DOES THE DIGITAL ECONOMY AFFECT CORPORATE BUSINESS CREDIT SUPPLY?
- Author
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Xiaohui CHEN and Xiang CHENG
- Subjects
HIGH technology industries ,COMMERCIAL credit ,CORPORATE debt ,CORPORATE finance ,RESOURCE allocation - Abstract
Business credit supply entails a firm providing credit to its customers as a means to gain a competitive edge. The advent of the digital economy has brought about profound changes in business practices. In this context, it becomes crucial to examine how the digital economy impacts the business credit supply of enterprises. This study employs a theoretical framework to derive insights and carries out an empirical analysis using the City Digital Economy Development Index spanning from 2008 to 2021, along with data from A-share listed companies in Shanghai and Shenzhen. The objective is to explore the influence of the digital economy on corporate business credit supply and its underlying mechanisms. The findings reveal that the digital economy can enhance corporate business credit supply by reducing the incidence of bad debt, thus enabling companies to extend more credit to their customers. This research contributes empirical evidence for understanding the microeconomic impact of the digital economy, while also providing theoretical insights to advance the development of the digital economy and optimize the allocation of financial resources, thereby alleviating corporate financing constraints. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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8. The Asymmetric Effect of Credit Supply on Firm‐Level Productivity Growth.
- Author
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MANARESI, FRANCESCO and PIERRI, NICOLA
- Subjects
BANK loans ,INDUSTRIAL productivity ,CORPORATIONS ,CORPORATE finance ,CREDIT ,BUSINESS expansion ,FINANCIAL security ,INDUSTRIAL efficiency - Abstract
We study the impact of bank credit on firm productivity. We exploit a matched firm‐bank database, covering all the credit relationships of Italian corporations, to measure idiosyncratic supply‐side shocks to credit availability and estimate a production model augmented with financial frictions. We find the effect of credit supply to be asymmetric: contractions harm TFP growth, halting productivity‐enhancing activities; positive credit supply shocks have limited effects. This points toward a role of financial stability in preserving productivity growth. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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9. Correlated lending to government and the private sector: what do we learn from the Great Recession?
- Author
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Ozili, Peterson K.
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- 2024
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10. Bank Regulatory Capital Arbitrage: Evidence from Housing Overappraisals.
- Author
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Mayordomo, Sergio, Rachedi, Omar, and Rodríguez Moreno, María
- Subjects
RESIDENTIAL mortgages ,ARBITRAGE ,BANK capital ,LOANS ,CAPITAL requirements ,BANKING laws ,PRICES ,HOUSING - Abstract
The overstatement of asset collateral values reduces bank capital requirements. We identify this novel form of regulatory arbitrage by studying housing overappraisals, the difference between housing collateral values computed by appraisers and actual transaction prices. We leverage granular loan-level data from Spain and a kink in the scheme of residential mortgage risk weights to show that tighter regulatory requirements cause larger overappraisals. This bias depends on the relationship between appraisers and banks; appraisers inflate mortgage collateral values only for their major customer banks. On average, overappraisals lower risk-weighted mortgages by 9%. Mortgage overappraisals allow banks to free up regulatory capital to support additional risk-taking in the corporate loan market. This paper was accepted by Victoria Ivashina, finance. Supplemental Material: The data files and online appendix are available at https://doi.org/10.1287/mnsc.2023.4805. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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11. The effect of cutting interest rates on corporate investments: A real options model.
- Author
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Han, Nan‐Wei, Hung, Mao‐Wei, and Wu, I‐Shin
- Abstract
We propose a real options model with regime shifts to investigate the effect of cutting interest rates on corporate investments when a financial crisis occurs. Cutting interest rates would lower the investment project's hurdle rate. The reduction in hurdle rate is positively related to the magnitude of interest rate cuts and the persistence of the financial crisis. The hurdle rate becomes lower in the financial crisis state because the reduction in interest rate would lower the cost of capital and the opportunity cost of immediate investment. In the numerical analysis of this study, we show that the change in the opportunity cost accounts for most of the change in the hurdle rate. Upon taking into consideration the firm's financing constraints, we find that cutting interest rates accelerates investments for firms with high liquidity. However, for firms with low liquidity, the optimal investment threshold is not affected by the variation in interest rates. Instead, the investments of low‐liquidity firms are affected by the change in the friction of credit supply. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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12. Credit supply shocks, home purchase volume, and borrowing behavior.
- Author
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Conklin, James N., Liu, Haoyang, and Zhang, Calvin
- Subjects
HOUSE buying ,CONSUMER behavior ,PRICE levels ,HOME prices ,LOANS ,HOME environment - Abstract
We exploit the 2007 private label securitization (PLS) freeze as a quasi‐experiment to study the impact of a negative credit supply shock on home purchases and borrowing behavior. Using a difference‐in‐differences estimator, we show that a negative supply shock to first‐lien mortgages has little impact on the volume of purchases financed with a mortgage, but significantly reduces the average first‐lien loan balance. Much of this reduction in loan balances is the result of increased bunching at the conforming loan limit that is achieved through a combination of greater second mortgage utilization and larger downpayments. Importantly, we find significant heterogeneity in the response to the mortgage supply shock across borrower characteristics and house price levels. Home purchase volume does decline after the shock for less creditworthy borrowers and in expensive locations. The reduction in first‐lien balances is fairly uniform across borrower types, however, the effect is slightly more acute in less expensive areas. Our results suggest that financial market frictions (e.g., downpayment constraints, imperfect credit) play an important role in determining how credit supply shocks impact housing purchases and borrowing behavior. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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13. Research on the influence of FinTech development on credit supply of commercial banks: the case of China.
- Author
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Guo Wu, Jiadong Luo, and Kejing Tao
- Subjects
BANKING industry ,COMMERCIAL credit ,FINANCIAL technology ,BANK loans ,COMMUNITY banks ,SOCIAL enterprises ,GOVERNMENT ownership of banks - Abstract
This study investigates the impact of FinTech development on the credit supply of China's commercial banks to individuals and enterprises. We first evaluate the development status and prospects of FinTech in China and construct theoretical influencing hypotheses. A 'supply-side' FinTech development index is constructed using principal component analysis. We employ panel data models and use financial data from 22 listed China's commercial banks between the year 2013 and 2020 to empirically test the hypothesized relationships. Multiple approaches are used to deal with endogenous problems. We also estimate the impact in a difference-in-difference model specification. The results show that FinTech development effectively facilitates the expansion of bank credit and the relationship continues to hold after remedying endogeneity issues. We further find that the impact is heterogeneous across banks in terms of bank type and bank size, with the impact on state-owned commercial banks being the least significant and the impact on small banks being the most significant. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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14. Factors influencing demand for, and supply of, agricultural credit: A study from Bangladesh
- Author
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Shakila Yeasmin, Sadika Haque, K.M. Mehedi Adnan, Mst Tania Parvin, Mohammad Saidur Rahman, Khandaker Mostafizur Rahman, Md. Salman, and Md. Emran Hossain
- Subjects
Agricultural credit demand ,Credit supply ,Rural households ,Credit users ,Bangladesh ,Agriculture (General) ,S1-972 ,Nutrition. Foods and food supply ,TX341-641 - Abstract
The provision of a wide range of financing choices enhances farmers' ability to respond to changing circumstances in their agricultural activities and maintain optimal levels of production. However, several household- and farm-level determinants impact the availability of, and demand for, agricultural credit in rural households. Therefore, the current study explores the determinants of demand for, and supply of, agricultural credit. To do so, data at the farm level were gathered using interviews with a randomly selected sample of 360 respondents in the Mymensingh region of Bangladesh. Additionally, 30 years' worth of secondary data were obtained from various sources to investigate the determinants of agricultural credit supply. Data were analyzed using binary logistics and multiple linear regression. Findings reveal that farmers’ demand for agricultural credit is positively influenced by farming experience and farm size. Factors that significanly discourage farmers from taking credit include (a) an increase in income-generating family members, (b) perceived high interest rates of credit, and (c) negative perceptions regarding the application procedure. Factors that increase agricultural credit supply are (a) an increase in credit supply targets and (b) increased severity of natural disasters. In addition, an increase in non-performing loans does not hinder agricultural credit supply as the Bangladeshi government has placed special emphasis on protecting farmers from crop failures and other adverse situations in order to achieve food self-sufficiency in the country.
- Published
- 2024
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15. Forecasting Economic Growth: Evidence from housing, banking, and credit conditions.
- Author
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Chatterjee, Ujjal
- Subjects
ECONOMIC forecasting ,CREDIT spread ,HOME prices ,BOND market ,BANK liquidity ,MONETARY policy - Abstract
Previous studies on economic growth have separately examined the role of housing, banking, and credit market conditions, despite their interrelatedness. Therefore, this paper comprehensively investigates the relative importance of four indicators [house prices, residential investment, corporate credit spreads, and aggregate bank liquidity creation (LC)] to forecast U.S. real GDP growth. We do so after accounting for a comprehensive set of other predictors and aim to identify indicators that better forecast economic growth. Our in-and out-of-sample results show that house prices and corporate credit spreads predict real GDP growth better than residential investment and LC. Moreover, shocks to house prices and corporate credit spreads have a greater impact on real GDP growth and other macroeconomic indicators than shocks to LC and residential investment. Furthermore, house prices have the largest positive impact on inflation and the largest negative effect on unemployment. These results may have potential monetary policy implications. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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16. Bank regulation and credit crunch: evidence from MENA region commercial banks
- Author
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EL-Moussawi, Chawki, Kassem, Mohamad, and Roussel, Josse
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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17. Less Bank Regulation, More Non-Bank Lending.
- Author
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Chen, Mary, Seung Jung Lee, Neuhann, Daniel, and Saidi, Farzad
- Subjects
BANK loans ,LIQUIDITY (Economics) ,INDUSTRIAL organization (Management) ,FINANCIAL markets ,INSURANCE companies - Abstract
Bank deregulation in the form of the repeal of the Glass-Steagall Act facilitated the entry of non-bank lenders into the market for syndicated loans during the pre-2008 credit boom. Institutional investors disproportionately purchase tranches of loans originated by universal banks able to cross-sell loans and underwriting services to firms (as permitted by the repeal). A shock to cross-selling intensity increases loan liquidity at origination and over time. The mechanism is that non-loan exposures ensure monitoring even when banks retain small loan shares. Our findings complement the conventional view that regulatory arbitrage caused the rise of non-bank lenders. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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18. Effect of abnormal increase in credit supply on economic growth in Nigeria.
- Author
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Ozili, Peterson K., Oladipo, Olajide, and Iorember, Paul Terhemba
- Subjects
ECONOMIC expansion ,BANKING industry ,CENTRAL banking industry ,GLOBAL Financial Crisis, 2008-2009 ,GROSS domestic product ,FINANCIAL institutions ,BANK assets - Abstract
Purpose: This paper investigates the effect of abnormal increase in credit supply on economic growth in Nigeria after controlling for the quality of the legal system, size of central bank asset, banking sector cost efficiency and bank insolvency risk. Design/methodology/approach: The authors employ the generalised method of moments (GMM) regression methodology to estimate the effect of abnormal increase in credit supply on two measures of economic growth in Nigeria. Findings: The abnormal increase in credit supply has a significant effect on economic growth. Abnormal increase in credit supply increases real gross domestic product (GDP) growth. The abnormal increase in credit supply decreases real GDP per capita during the global financial crisis. The abnormal increase in domestic credit to the private sector has a significant positive effect on GDP per capita when there is strong legal system quality in Nigeria. In contrast, the abnormal increase in domestic credit to the private sector has a significant negative effect on real GDP growth when there is strong legal system quality in Nigeria. Practical implications: The abnormal increase in credit supply is ineffective in increasing GDP per capita during crisis years. Policymakers should be cautious in pressuring financial institutions to release an abnormally large amount of credit into the economy particularly during financial crises. Rather, policymakers should encourage financial institutions to supply credit in a sustained manner – not in an abnormal manner –and in a way that supports growth. Originality/value: The present study contributes to the literature by analysing the effect of abnormal increase in credit supply on economic growth in a developing country context. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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19. Dynamic Pricing of Credit Cards and the Effects of Regulation.
- Author
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Hong, Suting, Hunt, Robert M., and Serfes, Konstantinos
- Subjects
PRICE regulation ,CREDIT card fees ,TIME-based pricing ,REVOLVING credit ,CONSUMERS' surplus ,INTEREST rates ,CREDIT cards - Abstract
We construct a two-period model of revolving credit with asymmetric information and adverse selection. In the second period, lenders exploit an informational advantage with respect to their own customers. Those rents stimulate competition for customers in the first period. The informational advantage the current lender enjoys relative to its competitors determines interest rates, credit supply, and switching behavior. We evaluate the consequences of limiting the repricing of existing balances as implemented by recent legislation. Such restrictions increase deadweight losses and reduce ex ante consumer surplus. The model suggests novel approaches to identify empirically the effects of this law. We find the pattern of changes to interest rates and balance transfer activity before and after the CARD Act are consistent with the testable implications of the model. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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20. China's Monetary Policy and the Loan Market: How Strong is the Credit Channel in China?
- Author
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Breitenlechner, Max and Nuutilainen, Riikka
- Subjects
MONETARY policy ,LOANS ,CREDIT - Abstract
We study the macroeconomic relevance of credit supply effects in the transmission of Chinese monetary policy. Using combinations of zero and sign restrictions in a structural vector autoregressive framework, we simultaneously identify monetary policy shocks and supply dynamics in the loan market. Our results show that policy shocks which coincide with loan supply effects account for roughly 60% of the overall effects of policy induced output dynamics. Moreover, we find that it takes roughly one year that banks adjust their lending strategies and loan supply effects unfold completely. Overall, our results provide robust empirical evidence that the credit channel constitutes an important and economically relevant transmission channel for monetary policy in China. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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21. Cross Country Heterogeneity of Procyclicality of Bank Loans: Evidence from OECD Countries using the SURE Model.
- Author
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Pipień, Mateusz and Anand, Abhisek
- Subjects
REAL economy ,HETEROGENEITY ,ECONOMIC sectors ,COUNTRIES ,BANK loans ,ECONOMIC activity - Abstract
Procyclicality of credit supply, which refers to the simultaneous movement of credit issued to the non-financial sector alongside economic activity indicators, can create a destabilizing feedback loop between the banking system and the real economy. The impact of credit supply on the financial and real sectors may vary across different economies, and the interconnectedness between countries can magnify the effect. We conducted research examining procyclicality of loans provided by banks, analyzing data at the country level for 13 OECD countries for over 16 years (2005-2020). Our research findings indicate that the parameters measuring the procyclical effect are statistically insignificant when using the FE panel model. To showcase diversity of relationships under scrutiny across countries, we employed an OLS regression approach to estimate procyclicality for each country's loans. This approach assumes a lack of interconnectedness between economies. We then introduced the Seemingly Unrelated Regression Equations (SURE) framework to examine how interconnectedness among countries affects the strength of loan procyclicality. Our analysis reveals the existence of procyclicality in many countries, and utilizing the SURE model further reinforces the phenomenon. Moreover, we found that bank-specific variables are more significant as loan supply determinants than macroeconomic variables. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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22. International transmission of monetary policy shocks and the bank lending channel: Evidence from Australia.
- Author
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Yahyaei, Hamid, Singh, Abhay, and Smith, Tom
- Abstract
We examine the transmission of international monetary policy shocks via the bank lending channel. Exploiting a panel of regulatory data on foreign banks operating in Australia, we show that the supply of credit is vulnerable to the international pass-through of monetary policy, with banks headquartered in Asia demonstrating high elasticity. Household and non-financial corporate loans are the most susceptible channels to policy shocks, while higher-margin lending, non-lending assets, and reservable liabilities are insensitive. We demonstrate that although banks curtail lending in the face of tighter monetary policy, they increase their non-reservable borrowing, suggesting an increased reliance on capital markets. Finally, we show that unconventional monetary policies have a muted effect compared to traditional measures. • We study the transmission of monetary policy shocks via the bank lending channel. • We exploit Australian regulatory bank data to test for the presence of the BLC. • Household and corporate loans are found to be the most susceptible channels. • Asian banks demonstrate the highest degree of lending elasticity. • Unconventional policies have a muted effect compared to traditional measures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Mortgage Supply and Housing Rents
- Author
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Gete, Pedro and Reher, Michael
- Subjects
E31 ,E32 ,E65 ,G2 ,G20 ,G21 ,G28 ,G29 ,R3 ,R31 ,R39 ,Credit Supply ,Homeownership ,Mortgage Markets ,Regulation ,Rents. ,Economic Theory ,Applied Economics ,Banking ,Finance and Investment ,Finance - Abstract
We show that a contraction of mortgage supply after the Great Recession has increased housing rents. Our empirical strategy exploits heterogeneity in MSAs' exposure to regulatory shocks experienced by lenders over the 2010-2014 period. Tighter lending standards have increased demand for rental housing and have led to higher rents, depressed homeownership rates and an increase in rental supply. Absent the credit supply contraction, annual rent growth would have been 2.1 percentage points lower over 2010-2014 in MSAs where lending standards rose from their 2008 levels.
- Published
- 2018
24. The Supply and Demand of Agricultural Loans.
- Author
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Scott, Francisco, Kuethe, Todd H., Kreitman, Ty, and Oppedahl, David
- Subjects
FEDERAL Reserve banks ,FARMERS ,BANKING industry ,FARM income ,LOANS - Abstract
Credit plays a critical role in the agricultural sector, but many studies suggest that farmers are credit constrained. We examine the degree to which changes in non-realestate agricultural loans at commercial banks are driven by changes in supply and demand, using information provided by agricultural lending surveys conducted by the Federal Reserve Banks of Chicago, Kansas City, and Minneapolis. Building on recent studies of loan officer opinion surveys, we estimate the changes in agricultural loan supply and demand using an unbalanced panel of 1,024 banks across 191 quarters (2002:Q1–2021:Q2). The survey responses provide instruments of “pure” supply and demand changes that allow us to examine fluctuations in bank-level agricultural loan volumes. We find that changes in the volume of non-real-estate farm loans at commercial banks are principally driven by changes in excess demand for loans. In addition, we demonstrate that excess loan demand is countercyclical to aggregate farm income. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Corporate Credit Derivatives
- Author
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Batta, George and Yu, Fan
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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26. Access of micro, small and medium-sized firms to bank credit: A logistic regression on a sample of Moroccan companies
- Author
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Mohamed Adaskou and Rachid El Bettioui
- Subjects
credit demand ,credit supply ,logistical regression ,MSMEs ,Economic history and conditions ,HC10-1085 ,Economic theory. Demography ,HB1-3840 - Abstract
The present study aims to analyze the determinants of the supply and demand of micro, small and medium-sized firms MSMEs credit by making reference to the theories of financial structure. From a sample of 356 Moroccan MSMEs surveyed in 2013 (WBSE, 2013), we used a binary logit model to discuss both demand and supply. According to our results, size, industry, gender of ownership, financial inclusion, level of education and experience of the Manager and the financing needs of the company, are the main factors that influence demand, while the warranty has no impact. On the supply side, with the exception of experience, the manager's characteristics have no effect, while the size, type of ownership and the duration of the loan have a major impact.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Eliminating the Tax Shield through Allowance for Corporate Equity: Cross‐Border Credit Supply Effects.
- Author
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BISWAS, SONNY, HORVÁTH, BÁLINT L., and ZHAI, WEI
- Subjects
CORPORATE taxes ,BANK loans ,CROSS border transactions ,FOREIGN loans ,FOREIGN banking industry ,CREDIT ,BANK capital - Abstract
This paper studies how the elimination of the corporate tax bias on bank leverage affects banks' credit provisioning using a quasi‐natural experiment, the introduction of an allowance for corporate equity (ACE) in Belgium. We find that affected banks increased their contribution within cross‐border syndicated loan facilities relative to other foreign banks, and that this effect was stronger for relatively safe borrowers. We estimate that Belgian bank‐led loans had on average 20–50 basis points lower spreads when ACE was in effect. Finally, our results suggest a relatively large, positive credit supply effect domestically. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Determinants of Corporate Loan Interest Rate: Case of Ukraine
- Author
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Solomiya Shpak
- Subjects
ukraine ,credit supply ,credit demand ,cost of debt ,Finance ,HG1-9999 ,Economics as a science ,HB71-74 - Abstract
This paper estimates the effect of loan, borrower, and bank characteristics on corporate loan pricing in Ukraine using rich loan-borrower-bank monthly panel data from 2013 and 2020 combined with data from borrowers’ financial statements. Examining an extensive set of fixed effects, we find that larger loans, loans with a shorter maturity period and larger collateral value have lower interest rates even after controlling for borrower characteristics. We also find that larger borrowers, borrowers with more tangible assets, lower indebtedness, and a higher interest coverage ratio who operate in concentrated industries secure lower interest rates. Our findings suggest that it is crucial to take into consideration both loan and borrower characteristics when estimating the effects of banks’ health on the loan interest rate.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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29. The Effect of Targeted Monetary Policy on Bank Lending
- Author
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Olli-Matti Laine
- Subjects
unconventional monetary policy ,credit supply ,tltro ,bank lending ,Public finance ,K4430-4675 ,Economic theory. Demography ,HB1-3840 - Abstract
This paper studies the effect of central banks’ targeted refinancing operations on bank lending. It utilizes data from the European Central Bank’s targeted longer-term refinancing operations (TLTROs) together with monthly bank level balance sheet data from multiple countries. The effect of targeted policy is identified utilizing the institutional setting that provides natural instrumental variables and a proxy for credit demand. Unlike previous papers, this paper studies the effects on corporate loans and loans for consumption separately. The cumulative effect of TLTROs on participating banks’ stock of corporate loans is estimated to be significant (about 20 per cent). However, the effect on lending for consumption is found close to zero. Furthermore, the positive effects on corporate loans are found to be driven by crisis countries suggesting that the effectiveness of monetary policy depends on the economic conditions. The paper also finds some evidence that the effect on government bond purchases is negative. This result is very different from the earlier results regarding non-targeted liquidity operations.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Bank capital requirements and risk-taking: Evidence from basel III.
- Author
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Anguren, Rebeca, Jiménez, Gabriel, and Peydró, José-Luis
- Abstract
We study the effects of both tighter and looser bank capital requirements on bank risk-taking. We exploit credit register data matched with firm and bank level data in conjunction with changes in capital requirements stemming from Basel III, including the introduction of a SME supporting bank capital factor in the European Union. We find that tighter capital requirements reduce the supply of bank credit to firms, while looser capital requirements mitigate the credit supply effects of increasing capital. Importantly, at the loan level (credit supply), banks more affected by capital requirements change less the supply of credit to riskier than to safer firms, and these asymmetric effects occur for both the tightening and the loosening of bank capital requirements. Finally, these effects are also important at the firm-level for total credit availability and for firm survival. Interestingly, our results suggest that those banks most impacted by the tighter Basel III capital requirements prioritize credit among ex-ante riskier firms to avoid their closure, consistent with loan evergreening. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Lending competition, regulation, and nontraditional mortgages.
- Author
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Acolin, Arthur, An, Xudong, and Wachter, Susan M.
- Subjects
MORTGAGE loans ,CREDIT ratings ,HOME prices ,GREAT Recession, 2008-2013 ,HOUSING market ,MORTGAGES - Abstract
We examine the factors that determine the likelihood of borrowers using nontraditional mortgages (NTMs) prior to the Great Recession. Borrower choice depends on borrower characteristics such as income, levels of asset holdings, credit score, and age, and on market factors such as house price appreciation as shown in the literature. We add to the literature by showing that lending competition was significantly associated with the early growth of NTMs while growth of nonbank lending was associated with a later‐stage expansion of NTMs. We also find that state‐level antipredatory lending laws were more effective in restraining the origination of NTMs in markets with higher levels of lending competition. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Financial deepening and human development in Nigeria: A non-linear approach.
- Author
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Afolabi, Mutiu Adeniyi
- Subjects
MONEY supply ,FINANCIAL deepening ,GROSS domestic product - Abstract
Objective: The study investigated the effect of credit supply on GDP on Human Development and as well examined the impact of Money supply on GDP on human development. It equally assessed the link between bank penetration and human development and the link between financial intermediation and human development. Research Design & Methods: This study used ex-post facto research design and a Non-Linear Autoregressive Distributed Lag (Asymmetry ARDL) to estimate the effect of financial deepening on human development. Eview 11 was used for the analysis. Findings: This research work discovered that the positive contribution of credit supply and money supply to human development in Nigeria is weak and the relationship between financial deepening and development is not always linear. The study revealed that the effect of branch expansion in Nigeria is negative because of limited bank products or services. Implications & Recommendations: The implication of this study is that expansionary monetary policies have the most significant positive impact on human development in Nigeria. The expansionary policy can as well worsen human development through inflationary pressure while a contractionary policy is an anti-human development approach and its effects on human development are negative. The study therefore recommends that: The central bank of Nigeria should place more emphasis on expansionary monetary tools to drive development and be cautious of inflation. CBN and banks should monitor their credit to avoid loan diversion by the beneficiaries and to beat extreme poverty. Contribution & Value Added: The study used asymmetry ARDL model as an improvement over the conventional regressions that the previous authors have been using to examine the link between financial deepening and human development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Financial deepening and human development in Nigeria: A non-linear approach
- Author
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Mutiu Adeniyi Afolabi
- Subjects
Financial Deepening ,Money Supply ,Credit Supply ,Human Development ,Asymmetric ARDL ,Business ,HF5001-6182 - Abstract
Objective: The study investigated the effect of credit supply on GDP on Human Development and as well examined the impact of Money supply on GDP on human development. It equally assessed the link between bank penetration and human development and the link between financial intermediation and human development. Research Design & Methods: This study used ex-post facto research design and a Non-Linear Autoregressive Distributed Lag (Asymmetry ARDL) to estimate the effect of financial deepening on human development. Eview 11 was used for the analysis. Findings: This research work discovered that the positive contribution of credit supply and money supply to human development in Nigeria is weak and the relationship between financial deepening and development is not always linear. The study revealed that the effect of branch expansion in Nigeria is negative because of limited bank products or services. Implications & Recommendations: The implication of this study is that expansionary monetary policies have the most significant positive impact on human development in Nigeria. The expansionary policy can as well worsen human development through inflationary pressure while a contractionary policy is an anti- human development approach and its effects on human development are negative. The study therefore recommends that: The central bank of Nigeria should place more emphasis on expansionary monetary tools to drive development and be cautious of inflation. CBN and banks should monitor their credit to avoid loan diversion by the beneficiaries and to beat extreme poverty. Contribution & Value Added: The study used asymmetry ARDL model as an improvement over the conventional regressions that the previous authors have been using to examine the link between financial deepening and human development.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. The role of foreign banks in the transmission of monetary policy: Empirical evidence from Tunisia
- Author
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Gassouma Mohamed Sadok and Ben-Ahmed Kais
- Subjects
policy shocks ,competitiveness ,credit supply ,banks ,tunisia ,Economic growth, development, planning ,HD72-88 - Abstract
This paper presents an empirical analysis of the effect of monetary policy shocks on credit supply in Tunisia, using a vector autoregressive model and a nonlinear interactive model. The focus is on the magnitude of these shocks in the presence of foreign banks. The variables of interest are the concentration index of deposit banks, and monetary policy shocks based on the monthly data of 27 universal and business banks covering the period 1993 to 2016. The results support a positive and significant impact of concentration index on credit supply. However, monetary policy shocks appear to have no significant effect when the market is concentrated with the entry of foreign banks. The findings of this study also reveal that the entry of foreign banks neutralises monetary policy shock transmission in the credit supply, which may be offset by market discipline.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Financial innovation regulations and firm performance: Evidence from Chinese listed firms.
- Subjects
PEER-to-peer lending ,ORGANIZATIONAL performance ,INNOVATIONS in business ,GOVERNMENT business enterprises ,BUSINESS enterprises ,MARKET share - Abstract
This study investigates the impacts of financial innovation regulations on Chinese listed firms in the period of 2008 to 2020, which comes to the theoretical contribution of this paper. These regulations introduced in 2016 mainly focus on the peer‐to‐peer (P2P) lending platforms in this country and tend to be negatively associated with firm performance, especially for those firms investing in the P2P lending platforms, as a large amount of P2P lending platforms with unfavourable performance disappear in recent years, which may end up negatively affecting those firms investing in them. Survived P2P lending platforms tend to be stronger, then become a type of substitute of traditional banks and are able to carve up the market share of bank. The latter therefore has to increase credit supply to maximise profits, which leads to the access to more credits and therefore worse firm performance, especially for those firms with financial constraints in terms of the cash–cash flow sensitivity. The empirical results are robust to the potential endogeneity issue of financial constraints. Larger firms and state‐owned enterprises (SOEs) tend to have better performance, implying that authorities may take actions for smaller firms (non‐SOEs) to offset the negative impacts of financial innovation regulations they suffer and achieve better implementation of financial innovation regulations, which comes to the practical contribution of this paper. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Basel III Capital Requirements and Constraint of Credit Supply in Open Transition Economy
- Author
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Blahová, Nad’a, Brůna, Karel, and Procházka, David, editor
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Credit Supply and Demand in Unconventional Times.
- Author
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ALTAVILLA, CARLO, BOUCINHA, MIGUEL, HOLTON, SARAH, and ONGENA, STEVEN
- Subjects
CREDIT ,FINANCIAL statements ,ECONOMIC shock ,MONETARY policy ,BANKING industry - Abstract
Do borrowers demand less credit from banks with weak balance sheets, following monetary policy shocks? To answer this, we use novel bank‐specific survey data matched with balance sheet information for euro area banks. We find that, following a monetary policy shock, bank strength influences credit demand as well as credit supply. Bank resilience is important for firms when selecting a lender and it is therefore vital to control for bank‐specific demand when identifying credit supply shocks. An application using bank‐specific demand shows that—even after fully controlling for demand, borrower quality, and bank strength—unconventional monetary policies stimulate loan supply. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Mortgage Borrowing and the Boom-Bust Cycle in Consumption and Residential Investment.
- Author
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Xiaoqing Zhou
- Subjects
MORTGAGES ,HOUSING market ,OVERHEAD costs ,HOMEOWNERS ,LIQUIDITY (Economics) - Abstract
This paper studies the transmission of the major shocks in the U.S. housing market in the 2000s to consumption and residential investment. Using geographically disaggregated data, I show that residential investment is more responsive to these shocks than consumption, as measured by elasticities and the implied contributions to GDP growth. I develop a structural life-cycle model featuring multiple types of housing investment to understand the large responses of residential investment. Consistent with the microdata, the model generates lumpy debt accumulation, lumpy housing investment and a strong correlation between mortgage borrowing and housing investment at the early stage of the life cycle. In the model, households move up the property ladder by increasing their mortgage debt after they have accumulated enough home equity. Since liquidity constraints and fixed costs prevent especially young homeowners from acquiring their desired home, shocks to their borrowing capacity have a large impact on residential investment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. How does land titling affect credit demand, supply, access, and rationing: Evidence from China.
- Author
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Cheng, Wenli, Zhou, Nan, and Zhang, Longyao
- Subjects
- *
LAND titles , *NEGOTIABLE instruments , *CREDIT control , *ECONOMIC impact , *LAND use , *RATIONING , *HEALTH care rationing - Abstract
Based on official survey data from the Chinese Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs collected in 2010 and 2015, we use the difference‐in‐differences method to study how the Chinese land titling reform beginning in 2009 in tiers ("the Reform") affected the demand, supply, access, and rationing on the Chinese rural credit market. Our main findings are: (1) the Reform increased households' hidden credit demand, but not their effective credit demand; (2) the Reform had no significant effect on effective credit supply or a household's credit access; (3) the Reform increased the likelihood of non‐price credit rationing, in particular risk rationing; and (4) in the subsample of households living in counties where the local governments explicitly permitted the use of land as collateral, the Reform had a positive effect on credit supply; but in the subsample of households living in counties where land collateral was not explicitly permitted, the Reform was associated with an increase in non‐price rationing. Findings of this study are not only useful to assess the economic and social implications of rural land titling in China, but they also offer insights in understanding similar policies in other countries, particularly developing economies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. How to Think about Finance
- Author
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Mian, Atif, author
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Anti-corruption, credit supply, and agricultural economic development.
- Author
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Lu, Man, Bai, Heju, and Wu, Yiming
- Abstract
• Anti-corruption and credit supply can effectively enhance agricultural economic development. • Anti-corruption measures and credit supply can jointly promote the development of the agricultural economy. • This effect is more pronounced in sample groups with a lower degree of marketization. This study analyzes regional panel data from China (2013–2019) to explore how the government's anti-corruption efforts and credit supply affect agricultural economic development. The empirical results show that anti-corruption and credit supply can effectively enhance agricultural economic development, and there is a complementary relationship between anti-corruption and credit supply, meaning that anti-corruption measures and credit supply can jointly promote the development of the agricultural economy. Further analysis indicates that the complementary and synergistic effect of the two on agricultural economic development is more pronounced in sample groups with a lower degree of marketization. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. The macroeconomic costs of the bank tax.
- Author
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Borsuk, Marcin, Przeworska, Joanna, Saunders, Anthony, and Serwa, Dobromił
- Abstract
In this paper, we investigate the real effects of special taxation on banks. We provide evidence that the introduction of a new fiscal levy on banks significantly impairs their performance and has an adverse impact on the real economy through the lending channel. Using micro-level data on lending relationships, we identify the credit supply shock related with a bank tax controlling for loan demand factors. We compute a firm-specific measure of firm exposure to burdened credit institutions. We find a negative impact of the tax shock on investment and output. Our results are important from a policy perspective as they shed light on the economic consequences of double taxation on banks. • Introduction of a bank levy in Poland results in decreased profitability and lending by taxed banks. • Taxed banks experience a reduction in credit growth for the non-financial private sector. • Loan growth to non-financial corporations contracts following the tax implementation. • Firms reliant on loans from taxed banks see declines in their investments and sales. • The introduction of the bank tax has a marked adverse effect on national GDP growth over time. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Impact of higher capital buffers on banks' lending and risk-taking in the short- and medium-term: Evidence from the euro area experiments.
- Author
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Cappelletti, Giuseppe, Ponte Marques, Aurea, and Varraso, Paolo
- Abstract
We study the impact of higher capital buffers on bank lending and risk-taking behaviour, at different time horizons following the initial policy decision. Employing a regression discontinuity design and confidential centralised supervisory data for euro area banks from 2014 to 2017, our research uniquely explores the effects of the EU policy on other systemically important institutions (O-SIIs) through a quasi-randomised experiment, exploiting the induced policy change and discontinuity of the O-SII identification process. Our findings show that the introduction of the O-SII buffers resulted in a short-term reduction in credit supply to households and financial sector, followed by a medium-term shift towards less risky borrowers, particularly in the household sector. We find a temporary cut in loan growth post-capital hikes, succeeded by a rebound in the medium-term. Our results substantiate the hypothesis that higher capital buffers can positively discipline banks by reducing risk-taking in the medium-term. At the same time, evidence suggests a limited adverse impact on the real economy, characterised by a temporary reduction in credit supply restricted to instances of macroprudential policy tightening. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Bank credit and money creation in a DSGE model of a small open economy
- Author
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Jaunius Karmelavičius and Tomas Ramanauskas
- Subjects
banks ,financial intermediation ,money creation ,credit supply ,deposits ,Public finance ,K4430-4675 ,Economic growth, development, planning ,HD72-88 - Abstract
By the act of lending banks do not actually intermediate pre-accumulated real resources but rather create new financial resources in the form of deposits. Therefore, bank credit needs to be modelled as a monetary phenomenon, which directly fuels domestic demand and inflationary pressures. So far, there have been just a few attempts to model banks as monetary institutions in the DSGE model. In this paper we propose a simple DSGE model, which nevertheless accommodates banks as genuinely monetary institutions and captures banks' institutional ability to create money. Our model features a small open economy with nominal prices, savers and borrowers and a banking sector. Following an exogenously induced shock to banker's willingness to lend, the bank does not have to raise deposit rates or significantly increase borrowing from abroad as deposit dynamics closely resembles that of credit, which allows us to analyse real and nominal consequences of bank credit (and money) creation.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Credit Crunch Testing in Iranian Banking System
- Author
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Shahchera, Mahshid, Noorbakhsh, Fatemeh, Monfared, Homa, Tsounis, Nicholas, editor, and Vlachvei, Aspasia, editor
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. The real effects of banks' corporate credit supply: A literature review.
- Author
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Güler, Ozan, Mariathasan, Mike, Mulier, Klaas, and Okatan, Nejat G.
- Subjects
- *
CORPORATE banking , *LITERATURE reviews , *KNOWLEDGE gap theory - Abstract
In this article, we review the rapidly growing literature on the real effects of banks' corporate credit supply. We cover recent methodological advances and provide an in‐depth survey of the existing evidence. The literature consistently shows that credit supply contractions lead to adverse real outcomes, but economic magnitudes vary across samples and identification strategies. This variation has become smaller in more recent work, using highly granular data. We further document heterogeneity in firm outcomes and show that the evidence is more ambiguous for expansionary shocks. Our analysis allows us to identify current knowledge gaps and worthwhile avenues for future research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. The dynamic effects of non-performing loans on banks' cost of capital and lending supply in the Eurozone.
- Author
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Chiesa, Gabriella and Mansilla-Fernández, José Manuel
- Subjects
CAPITAL costs ,BANK loans ,NONPERFORMING loans ,EUROZONE ,BANK capital ,BANK liquidity - Abstract
This paper analyses the transmission channel from non-performing loans to the cost of capital, credit provision and liquidity creation in the banks of the Eurozone. The empirical results suggest that holdings of non-performing loans increase both the long- and short-term cost of capital for banks. Moreover, the less capitalized the bank, the greater the reduction in credit provision and liquidity creation due to the increased cost of capital. This phenomenon is found to be more economically significant for European periphery country banks than for core country banks. The identification of the transmission channel is robust to the Granger predictability test. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Not All Bank Liquidity Creation Boosts Prices ⎯ The Case of the US Housing Markets.
- Author
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Zongyuan LI and Rose Neng LAI
- Subjects
HOUSING market ,STANDARD metropolitan statistical areas ,BANK liquidity ,PRICES ,HOME prices - Abstract
This paper is about investigating how different bank liquidity creation activities affect housing markets. Using data of 401 metropolitan statistical areas/metropolitan statistical area divisions (MSAs/MSADs) of the U.S. between 1990 and 2018, we show that not all bank liquidity creation activities boost the housing markets. In particular, unlike asset-side and off-balance sheet liquidity creations, funding-side liquidity creation dampens housing markets. The relationships between liquidity creation activities and housing markets are stronger in regions with inelastic house supply, but flip when banks face external liquidity shocks. We also find that housing markets dominated by large banks are more sensitive to off-balance sheet liquidity creation activities. Finally, as expected, asset-side and off-balance sheet liquidity creations boost housing markets by driving house prices away from fundamental values. Our results offer a more thorough explanation of how bank liquidity creation fuels the momentum of housing markets. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
49. Investigating the dynamic relationships between credit supply, economic growth, and the environment: empirical evidence of sub-regional economies in Sub-Saharan Africa.
- Author
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Ntarmah, Albert Henry, Kong, Yusheng, and Manu, Emmanuel Kwaku
- Subjects
VECTOR error-correction models ,ECONOMIC expansion ,GENERALIZED method of moments ,IMPULSE response ,CARBON emissions ,CREDIT ,KUZNETS curve - Abstract
Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) is considered the most vulnerable to challenges emanating from climate changes. A number of factors notably accelerated changes in growth influence SSA environment. Linking financial sector within growth and environmental outcomes has been the focus of policy makers and researchers. This study investigated the dynamic relationships between credit supply, economic growth, and the environment from the perspectives of the four sub-regional economies (Central, East, Southern, and West African regions) in SSA over the period 1990–2018. In addition, the study tested Environmental Kuznets Curve hypothesis across sub-regions. We employed panel vector autoregressive (panel VAR) model in a generalized method of moment framework to investigate the topic. The panel VAR results revealed that (i) economic growth negatively influence on carbon emissions of Central African countries but not in the East, Southern and West African sub-regions, (ii) credit supply had significantly positive influence on carbon emissions and economic growth of Central and East African sub-regions but negative influence on carbon emissions and economic growth West African sub-regions in SSA, and (iii) carbon emissions had significantly negatively influence on credit supply of East and West African sub-regions. The granger causality results revealed bidirectional causal links between credit supply and carbon emissions, economic growth, and credit supply in the Central and East African sub-regions, while most of the relationships were unidirectional. The impulse response function revealed that the impact of one variable on another vary throughout the periods and across sub-regions. Similarly, the elasticity of the variables to each other varies across sub-regions over the period studied. EKC hypothesis was validated in East African sub-region but was rejected in Central (u-shape relationship), Southern, and West African sub-regional economies indicating variations in growth and environmental outcomes among the sub-regional economies. Specific sub-regional policy recommendations are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. The Brazilian Credit Market During the Great Recession
- Author
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Cunha, André Moreira, Lélis, Marcos Tadeu Caputi, Haines, Andrés Ernesto Ferrari, da Silva, Pedro Perfeito, Arestis, Philip, editor, Troncoso Baltar, Carolina, editor, and Prates, Daniela Magalhães, editor
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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