Lending Standards, Credit Booms and Monetary Policy

Forschungsbereich: Monetary Policy, Financial Markets
Forscher: Elena Afanasyeva,
Jochen Güntner
Datum: 1.1.2014
Zusammenfassung:

What happens to the lending standards of banks in times of expansionary monetary policy? One of the explanations of the credit boom that led to the recent financial crisis is that banks took excessive risks because of monetary policy rates had been “too low for too long”. Afanasyeva and Güntner show that low monetary policy rates may also induce banks to lower their lending standards that is to grant more and riskier loans. In their analysis, IMFS researcher Afanasyeva and Güntner, Assistant Professor at the University of Linz, have focused on U.S. banks’ risk attitude before the financial crisis. They found out that the U.S. banks significantly lowered their lending standards, such as the collateral requirements for firms, in response to an unexpected reduction in interest rates. Thus, the banks want to gain a larger “share of the pie”. This effect increases with the degree of interest-rate smoothing in the monetary policy rule. As a consequence, companies become more leveraged and thus more likely to default. (04.11.14)

Final publication: Journal of Monetary Economics, Vol. 111, May 2020. p.118-134 "Bank market power and the risk channel of monetary policy"

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