Search results for "Monetary policy"

showing 10 items of 105 documents

The impact of quantitative easing on UK bank lending: Why banks do not lend to businesses?

2021

Abstract The growing proportion of UK bank lending to the financial sector reached a peak in 2007 just before the onset of the Global Financial Crisis (GFC). This marks a trend in the dwindling amount of bank lending to private sector non-financial corporations (PNFCs), which was exacerbated with the Great Recession. Many central banks aimed to revive bank lending with quantitative easing (QE) and unconventional monetary policy. We propose an agent based computational economics (ACE) model which combines the main factors in the economic environment of QE and Basel regulatory framework to analyse why UK banks do not prioritize lending to non-financial businesses. The lower bond yields caused…

/dk/atira/pure/subjectarea/asjc/2000/2002Organizational Behavior and Human Resource ManagementEconomics and EconometricsRisk weighted assetsFinancial systemBasel IIGilt yieldsCapital adequacy requirementsMonetary policyQuantitative easing0502 economics and businessRisk-weighted assetCapital requirementbank lending [Quantitative easing]050207 economics/dk/atira/pure/sustainabledevelopmentgoals/industry_innovation_and_infrastructure050208 financeBond05 social sciencesMonetary policySDG 8 - Decent Work and Economic GrowthQuantitative easing: bank lending/dk/atira/pure/sustainabledevelopmentgoals/decent_work_and_economic_growthAgent-based modellingFinancial crisisSDG 9 - Industry Innovation and InfrastructureSmall and medium-sized enterprisesBusiness/dk/atira/pure/subjectarea/asjc/1400/1407Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization
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Economic Support during the COVID Crisis. Quantitative Easing and Lending Support Schemes in the UK

2021

Abstract We investigate how UK bank business lending responded to the simultaneous use of quantitative easing, leverage ratio capital requirements, and government COVID lending support schemes. We find no evidence that the Brexit wave increased lending to nonfinancial businesses, compared to the previous waves, except for QE-banks subject to the UK leverage ratio, suggesting that the ratio incentivised QE-banks to lend to businesses. The government schemes helped expand lending especially to SMEs post the COVID wave, indicating that complementing QE with other credit easing programmes can reinforce its impact on lending to the real economy. During COVID-stress, changes to the UK leverage ra…

/dk/atira/pure/subjectarea/asjc/2000/2003/dk/atira/pure/subjectarea/asjc/2000/2002Economics and EconometricsHistoryPolymers and PlasticsEconomicsSocial Sciences2002 Economics and EconometricsFinancial systemIndustrial and Manufacturing EngineeringMonetary policyBusiness & EconomicsBank lendingQuantitative easingCapital requirementBusiness and International ManagementGovernmentMonetary policyQuantitative easingEconomic support10003 Department of Banking and Finance330 EconomicsMarket liquidityBrexit2003 FinanceIntermediationBusinessFinanceSSRN Electronic Journal
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Finances and credit: problems, conceptions, management

2001

Economic situation in the Baltic States is investigated, in particular the development of economics in transition is analysed in Latvia, Lithuania, Estonia and Poland. There are studied the following details: Monetary and exchange rate policy; Crediting and bank management; Development of securities market; Management of taxes and finance; Development of accounting policy; Pension reform perspective etc.

Banks and bankingMonetary policySecurities marketPension reformCredit:SOCIAL SCIENCES::Business and economics::Economics [Research Subject Categories]Bankas un banku darbībaExchange rateTaxesMonetārā politikaFiskālā politikaKredītiAccounting policy
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Financial Fragility and Interacting Units: an Exercise

2010

This paper assumes that financial fluctuations are the result of the dynamic interaction between liquidity and solvency conditions of individual financial units. The framework is designed as a heterogeneous agent model which proceeds through discrete time steps within a finite time horizon. The interaction at the microlevel between financial units and the market maker, who is in charge of clearing the market, produces interesting complex dynamics. The model is analyzed by means of numerical simulations and agent-based computational economics (ACE) approach. The behaviour and evolution of financial units are studied for different parameter regimes in order to show the importance of the param…

Computational economicsFinancial economicsmedia_common.quotation_subjectMonetary policyFinancial fragilityagent-based modelMarket makerMarket liquidityInterest rateComplex dynamicsOrder (exchange)EconomicsEconometricsmedia_common
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Monetary policy, asset prices and consumption in China

2012

Abstract This paper studies the wealth channel in China. Although the wealth channel has been found to be functioning in many advanced countries, its existence is yet to be explored in most emerging economies, also in China. In order to illuminate dynamics between monetary policy, asset prices and consumption, we use the structural vector autoregression method. The findings support the view that a loosening of China's monetary policy does indeed lead to higher asset prices. Furthermore, a positive shock to residential prices increases household consumption, while the role of stock prices seems to be small from the households’ point of view. Finally, we test the existence of the wealth chann…

Consumption (economics)Economics and EconometricsShock (economics)Order (exchange)Monetary policyEconomicsAsset (economics)Monetary economicsEmerging marketsDiscount pointsStock (geology)Economic Systems
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Monetary Policy and the Exchange Rate During the Asian Crisis: Identification Through Heteroscedasticity

2003

This paper examines whether a monetary policy tightening (i.e., an increase in the domestic interest rate) was successful in defending the exchange rate from speculative pressures during the Asian financial crisis. We estimate a bivariate VECM for four Asian countries, and improve upon existing studies in two important ways. First, by using a long data span we are able to compare the effects of an interest rate rise on the nominal exchange rate during tranquil and turbulent periods. Second, we take into account the endogeneity of interest rates and identify the system by exploiting the heteroscedasticity properties of the relevant time series, following Rigobon (2002). We find that while ti…

Credit channelInterest rate parityExchange ratemedia_common.quotation_subjectFinancial crisisMonetary policyEconomicsInternational Fisher effectMonetary economicsEndogeneityInterest ratemedia_commonSSRN Electronic Journal
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Stock Market Bubbles and Monetary Policy Effectiveness

2016

In this paper we provide evidence on the response of stock prices to monetary policy shocks, but conditioning the analysis to the direction of the monetary policy surprises and to the business conditions. We follow a two steps approach: First we use the SVAR approach to identify monetary policy shocks; and then we conduct regression analyses of contemporary stock market returns and monetary policy shocks in order to extract the implicit relationship between these variables in the four scenarios defined. Our results show that monetary policy do not impact on stock market returns in a significant form in the scenario defined by a positive shock and an expansion period, coinciding the poor eff…

Credit channelMonetary policyBusiness cycleEconomicsStock marketMonetary economicsImplicit relationshipStock (geology)SSRN Electronic Journal
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Interest Rates and Net Interest Margins: The Impact of Monetary Policy

2017

In this chapter, we examine the determinants of bank net interest margin, focusing on the effect of interest rates, and thus monetary policy decisions. The analysis is carried with a panel of banks from 32 OECD countries over the period 2003–2014. The results show a quadratic relationship between net interest margins and interest rates, implying that the variation of the latter has a greater effect when interest rates are low. An important policy implication of the results is that there is a trade-off between economic growth and financial stability associated with the impact of expansionary monetary policy when the level of interest rates is very low. As a result, if the current scenario of…

Credit channelNet interest marginEconomic policymedia_common.quotation_subjectMonetary policyEconomicsProfitability indexOecd countriesMonetary economicsForward guidanceNet interest incomeInterest ratemedia_common
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Public debt, money and consumer prices: a vector error correction model for Germany

2015

In the paper, the authors analyse the interaction between public debt and inflation including the mutual impulse response. The European sovereign debt crisis brought once again a focus onto the consequences of government debt in combination with an expansionary monetary policy for the development of consumer prices. Public deficits can lead to higher inflation rates if the money supply is expansionary. The high level of national debt, not only in the Euro-crisis countries, and the strong increase in the total assets of the European Central Bank, as a result of the unconventional monetary policy, have caused fears of inflating government debt. The transmission from public debt to inflation t…

Debtmedia_common.quotation_subjectDebt-to-GDP ratioMoney supplyMonetary policyEconomicsGovernment debtMonetary economicsInternal debtExternal debtDebt levels and flowsmedia_commonEkonometria
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Debt Sustainability and Fiscal Space in a Heterogeneous Monetary Union: Normal Times Vs the Zero Lower Bound

2020

In this paper we study fiscal policy effects and fiscal space for countries in a monetary union with different levels of public debt. We develop a dynamic stochastic general equilibrium (DSGE) model of a two-country monetary union, calibrated to match the characteristics of Spain and Germany, in which debt sustainability is endogenously determined a la Bi (2012) to shape the responses of the risk premium on public debt. Policy shocks change the market’s expectation about future primary surplus, producing a direct effect on the sovereign risk premium and macroeconomic responses of the economy. In normal times the costs of a government spending driven fiscal consolidation in the high-debt cou…

Debtmedia_common.quotation_subjectFiscal spaceRisk premiumZero lower boundMonetary policyEconomicsDynamic stochastic general equilibriumMonetary economicsFiscal sustainabilitymedia_commonFiscal policySSRN Electronic Journal
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