Essays is Bank Competition and Credit Policy

Essays is Bank Competition and Credit Policy PDF Author: Gustavo Passarelli Giroud Joaquim
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category :
Languages : en
Pages : 290

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Book Description
This thesis estimates the eect of competition in the financial sector using both individual level data and economic theory, and explores the role of credit policy in mitigating potential adverse effects of imperfect competition. The first essay uses heterogeneous exposure to large bank mergers to estimate the eect of bank competition on both financial and real variables in local Brazilian markets. Using detailed administrative data on loans and firms, we employ a difference-in-differences empirical strategy to identify the causal eect of bank competition. Following M&A episodes, spreads increase and there is persistently less lending in exposed markets. We also find that bank competition reduces employment. We develop a tractable model of heterogeneous firms and concentration in the banking sector and show that the observed effects in the data and predicted by the model are consistent. Among other counterfactuals, we show that if the Brazilian lending spread were to fall to the world level, output would increase by approximately 5%. The second essay develops a contract-based model of industrial organization for markets characterized by information and other frictions (Moral Hazard, Limited Commitment, Adverse Selection etc.) and dierent market structures (Monopoly, Oligopoly, Competition), the latter driven by spatial costs, idiosyncratic preferences, and number of financial service providers. We derive a likelihood estimator for the structural parameters that determine contracting frictions and market structure and apply this to the Townsend Thai data on small and medium enterprises and bank locations. Our model of production is microfounded and thus can be used for a broad set counterfactuals. The third essay explores the role of credit policies to mitigate the effects of lack of competition in the financial sector. In many emerging markets, governments try to increase credit access and stimulate economic growth by imposing caps on lending rates. We analyze these policies by extending workhorse models with financial frictions to include a banking sector with market power. Caps are beneficial as they reduce credit costs but are also harmful as they crowd out risky borrowers which can access credit only at high interest rates, and thus have an ambiguous effect in current output and capital accumulation. We show that the optimal policy to maximize steady state welfare involves relatively high caps on a large share of bank loans. The optimal policy decreases output today, but increases capital accumulation through a lower cost of credit and thus output in the future. Thanks to tractable aggregation properties, the framework can be used to analyze a broad set of alternative credit policies.

Essays is Bank Competition and Credit Policy

Essays is Bank Competition and Credit Policy PDF Author: Gustavo Passarelli Giroud Joaquim
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category :
Languages : en
Pages : 290

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Book Description
This thesis estimates the eect of competition in the financial sector using both individual level data and economic theory, and explores the role of credit policy in mitigating potential adverse effects of imperfect competition. The first essay uses heterogeneous exposure to large bank mergers to estimate the eect of bank competition on both financial and real variables in local Brazilian markets. Using detailed administrative data on loans and firms, we employ a difference-in-differences empirical strategy to identify the causal eect of bank competition. Following M&A episodes, spreads increase and there is persistently less lending in exposed markets. We also find that bank competition reduces employment. We develop a tractable model of heterogeneous firms and concentration in the banking sector and show that the observed effects in the data and predicted by the model are consistent. Among other counterfactuals, we show that if the Brazilian lending spread were to fall to the world level, output would increase by approximately 5%. The second essay develops a contract-based model of industrial organization for markets characterized by information and other frictions (Moral Hazard, Limited Commitment, Adverse Selection etc.) and dierent market structures (Monopoly, Oligopoly, Competition), the latter driven by spatial costs, idiosyncratic preferences, and number of financial service providers. We derive a likelihood estimator for the structural parameters that determine contracting frictions and market structure and apply this to the Townsend Thai data on small and medium enterprises and bank locations. Our model of production is microfounded and thus can be used for a broad set counterfactuals. The third essay explores the role of credit policies to mitigate the effects of lack of competition in the financial sector. In many emerging markets, governments try to increase credit access and stimulate economic growth by imposing caps on lending rates. We analyze these policies by extending workhorse models with financial frictions to include a banking sector with market power. Caps are beneficial as they reduce credit costs but are also harmful as they crowd out risky borrowers which can access credit only at high interest rates, and thus have an ambiguous effect in current output and capital accumulation. We show that the optimal policy to maximize steady state welfare involves relatively high caps on a large share of bank loans. The optimal policy decreases output today, but increases capital accumulation through a lower cost of credit and thus output in the future. Thanks to tractable aggregation properties, the framework can be used to analyze a broad set of alternative credit policies.

Essays in Bank Competition and Lending Behavior

Essays in Bank Competition and Lending Behavior PDF Author: Genuine Martin
Publisher:
ISBN: 9780355628401
Category : Economics
Languages : en
Pages : 130

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Book Description
This dissertation assesses the competitiveness of Tanzania's banking sector using both structural and non-structural (industrial organization) approaches, assesses the predictors of banks' lending behavior, and investigates the bank lending channel of monetary policy transmission process. The first and the second essays utilize bank-level panel data of commercial banks whereas the third employs aggregate time series data. My work contributes to understanding the underlying factors and processes which explain the nature of competition in the banking sector and the conduct of monetary policy in Tanzania. In the first essay, I use the dynamic regression model to test the hypotheses that the market power of banks in Tanzania leads to higher bank profits, by including the lag of the dependent variable among regressors to test the tendency of profits to persist over time, using the market share of banks to test the relative-market-power (RMP) hypothesis, and using concentration ratios to test the structure-conduct-performance (SCP) hypothesis. Using data drawn from twenty-six commercial banks during the 1998-2015 period, I establish from the results that the lag of the dependent variable, market share of banks, and industry concentration ratios (HHIs) have a positive and statistically significant effect on bank profit. These results support moderate persistence of bank profits over time, RMP and SCP hypotheses, as potential explanations of high bank profits. In the second essay, I also use the dynamic regression model to assess potential predictors of commercial banks' lending behavior and the bank lending channel of monetary policy transmission process. Using quarterly panel data for thirty-one commercial banks for the 1998-2015 period, I establish from the results that bank lending persists significantly over time, hence suggesting that some degree of relationship banking and lock-in-effect for lenders and borrowers exists. Although bank size and capital, and inflation rate are associated with higher bank lending, credit risk, private and foreign bank ownership, market power of banks, and the square of inflation rate, have a negative effect on lending. Results for the bank lending channel show that contractionary monetary policy (higher monetary policy indicators) is associated with higher bank lending, and this positive effect of contractionary monetary policy on bank lending is more pronounced in samples of all the banks and medium-sized banks that are more capitalized, in a sample of large banks with more liquidity and capital but with less assets, and in a sample of small banks with less size and capital. By drawing on a country-specific case of Tanzania, this essay is illuminating because results of studies of this nature differ across countries and regions, depending on the structure of the economy, financial sector development, institutional and regulatory environment. In Amidu (2014), determinants of bank lending are different across economic integrations (Economic Community of West African States [ECOWAS], the East African Community [EAC] and the Southern Africa Development Community [SADC]. In the third essay, I use the dynamic regression model (autoregressive process of order one), which empirically applies the theoretical seminal work of Panzar and Rosse (1987) to estimate an index of banking sector contestability, the H statistic, which is the sum of factor price elasticities of the reduced form revenue equation. Using time series data for the 1998-2015 period, the estimated H statistic of 0.57, characterizes Tanzania's banking sector as monopolistic competitive, in which high industry concentration co-exists with considerable contestable pressure. Bank revenues persist moderately over time, whereby interest revenue generation is a key bank activity. Furthermore, the aftermath of the 2006 second-generation financial sector reforms is associated with improved banking industry competitiveness, based on the moving average estimates of the H statistics, and is associated with changes in the banks' production functions, whereby banks substitute less funds (deposits) and physical capital, with more labor. These results are consistent with the dramatic decline in the interest rate spread and an increase in the proportion of labor costs.

Bank Competition and Corporate Finances

Bank Competition and Corporate Finances PDF Author: Chongyang Chen
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category : Banks and banking
Languages : en
Pages : 152

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Book Description
This dissertation consists of two essays which investigate how bank competition affects firms' financial policy and bank contracts. In the first essay I investigate how an increase in bank competition, and thereby an expansion in the supply of bank credit, influences affected firms' cash holdings, their use of trade credit, short-term debt, and long-term debt. I find that bank competition leads to a reduction in affected firms' use of trade credit, short-term debt and cash holdings, and an increase in their use of long-term debt. Moreover, some of these effects are more pronounced for financially constrained firms. Consequently the evidence highlights the influence of bank competition on corporate financial policies, particularly for financially constrained firms. In the second essay I investigate the relation between bank competition and corporate loan contracts using an instrumental variables approach following the passage of interstate banking deregulation law in 1994. I find that loan size, number of covenants, and covenant slack increase with bank competition. However, although the number of covenants increases, loan size also decreases for financially constrained firms. The results highlight the influence of bank competition on corporate debt covenants and underscore the differential impacts of bank competition on financially-constrained versus non-constrained firms.

THE BANK LENDING CHANNEL

THE BANK LENDING CHANNEL PDF Author: Elisheva Stern
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category :
Languages : en
Pages : 0

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Book Description
This dissertation includes three chapters discussing the importance of bank heterogeneity in monetary policy implementation using tools such as changes in the interest on reserve and the discount window on bank lending. The first two chapters focus on the implications of differences in government regulation, while the third chapter focuses on market competition. The first chapter assesses the effects of a policy reform changing the relative return of holding reserves on the reserves held by U.S. branches of foreign banks compared to conventional domestic banks, using difference-in-differences regression analysis. The second chapter studies the implications of dispersion in the relative return of holding reserves using a liquidity mismatch banking model with different sectors that can trade reserves in an over-the-counter market for federal funds. The model is used to study the effects of changes to regulation, policy rates, and other market conditions on the distribution of reserves across sectors and the federal funds rate. The third chapter documents changes in competition in the loan and deposit market over the last two decades and considers the implications for monetary policy tools using regression analysis compared to simulations of a Dynamic Stochastic General Equilibrium model.Chapter 1, titled DEPOSIT INSURANCE AND PORTFOLIO DESIGN OF BANKS, reviews the distinct response of U.S. branches of foreign banks to the monetary policy of interest on reserve balances following a policy reform in 2011. The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) reform changed the relative return of holding reserves for U.S. branches of foreign banks (foreign banks for short) compared to conventional domestic banks (domestic banks for short). The data show higher excess reserves held by foreign banks following this policy change. A fixed-effects model is used to measure the effect of a change in the FDIC policy on excess reserves held by each sector. A difference-in-difference comparison suggests a difference of 0.16 in reserves to assets of domestic banks compared to foreign banks following the policy change and a more considerable gap of around 0.25 for banks with average assets holdings in the top 15 percentile. Furthermore, the event study confirms that these larger banks widely capture the impact of policy. The next chapter, Chapter 2, titled BANK PORTFOLIO CHOICE AND MONETARY POLICY TRANSMISSION IN THE FACE OF A NEW FEDERAL FUNDS MARKET, studies the implications of differences in regulation of banks for monetary policy. The chapter presents an equilibrium model in the framework of Bianchi and Bigio (2022) to include two types of bank branches instead of one; domestic banks must hold deposit insurance, while U.S. branches of foreign banks cannot. Deposit insurance allows for a more stable funding source but attaches a higher balance-sheet cost. Calibration finds consistent predictions that explain the higher excess reserves and the sequential credit supply of foreign branches. Moreover, findings suggest that foreign branches are more responsive to monetary policy tools, such as interest on reserves, because their funding source is associated with higher volatility in deposit withdrawals. The monetary policy of changes to the corridor rates in the model is the same across all banks. Still, because U.S. branches of foreign banks face different tradeoffs than U.S domestic banks, monetary policy affects each sector differently. Chapter 3, titled CHANNELS OF MONETARY POLICY WITH IMPERFECT COMPETITION IN THE BANKING SECTOR, uses a relatively new measure of market power proposed by Boone (2008) to estimate the implications of market power on the pass-through of monetary policy for two monetary policy channels. The lending channel and the deposits channel. Data suggest that market power is high in the deposit market and somewhat high in the loan market, with an incline in competition in both sectors in the last two decades preceding 2001. The paper evaluates monetary policy pass-through to deposit and lending rates given the competition across banks using a Dynamic Stochastic General Equilibrium (DSGE) model with sticky prices. The central assumption of the model is that the pass-through depends on competition across banks. It includes banks with imperfectly competitive markups for loans to firms, markdowns of deposit rates to consumers, and a monetary policy authority that can either change the federal funds rate or the spread between the federal funds rate and the rate paid on excess reserves. The model estimations align with the empirical evidence suggesting banks will compensate on loan spreads to avoid the contraction in lending caused by higher policy rates, while deposits will fluctuate less, and therefore spreads may increase when market rates increase.

Banking, Monetary Policy and the Political Economy of Financial Regulation

Banking, Monetary Policy and the Political Economy of Financial Regulation PDF Author: Gerald A. Epstein
Publisher: Edward Elgar Publishing
ISBN: 1783472642
Category : Business & Economics
Languages : en
Pages : 391

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Book Description
The many forces that led to the economic crisis of 2008 were in fact identified, analyzed and warned against for many years before the crisis by economist Jane D�Arista, among others. Now, writing in the tradition of D�Arista's extensive work, the

Essays on Banking and Monetary Economics

Essays on Banking and Monetary Economics PDF Author: Mengbo Zhang
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category :
Languages : en
Pages : 298

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Book Description
This dissertation consists of three chapters on banking and monetary economics. In Chapter 1, I study whether monetary policy is less effective in a low interest-rate environment. To answer this question, I examine how the passthrough of monetary policy to banks' deposit rates has changed, during the secular decline in interest rates in the U.S. over the last decades. In the data, the passthrough increased for about one third of banks, and decreased for the rest. Moreover, the deposit-weighted bank-average passthrough increased under a lower interest rate. I explain this observation in a model where banks have market power over loans and face capital constraints. In the model, when interest rates are low, the passthrough falls as policy rates fall, only in markets where loan competition is high. Hence, the overall passthrough depends on the distribution of loan market power. I confirm the model's prediction using branch-level data of U.S. banks. This channel also impacts the transmission of monetary policy to bank lending under low interest rates. In Chapter 2 (joint with Tsz-Nga Wong), we document a new channel mediating the effects of monetary policy and regulation, the disintermediation channel. When the interest rate on excess reserves (IOER) increases, fewer banks are intermediating in the Fed funds market, and they intermediate less. Thus, the total Fed funds traded decreases. Similarly, disintermediation happens after the balance sheet cost rises, e.g. the introduction of Basel III regulations. The disintermediation channel is significant and supported by empirical evidence on U.S. banks. To explain this channel, we develop a continuous-time search-and-bargaining model of divisible funds and endogenous search intensity that includes the matching model (e.g. Afonso and Lagos, 2015b) and the transaction cost model (e.g. Hamilton, 1996) as special cases. We solve the equilibrium in closed form, derive the dynamic distributions of trades and Fed fund rates, and the stopping times of entry and exit from the Fed fund market. IOER reduces the spread of marginal value of holding reserves, and hence the gain of intermediation. In general, the equilibrium is constrained inefficient, as banks intermediate too much. In Chapter 3 (joint with Saki Bigio and Eduardo Zilberman), we compare the advantages of lump-sum transfers versus a credit policy in response to the Covid-19 crisis. The Covid-19 crisis has lead to a reduction in the demand and supply of sectors that produce goods that need social interaction to be produced or consumed. We interpret the Covid-19 shock as a shock that reduces utility stemming from "social" goods in a two-sector economy with incomplete markets. For the same path of government debt, transfers are preferable when debt limits are tight, whereas credit policy is preferable when they are slack. A credit policy has the advantage of targeting fiscal resources toward agents that matter most for stabilizing demand. We illustrate this result with a calibrated model. We discuss various shortcomings and possible extensions to the model.

Competition Policy for Modern Banks

Competition Policy for Modern Banks PDF Author: Mr.Lev Ratnovski
Publisher: International Monetary Fund
ISBN: 1484366174
Category : Business & Economics
Languages : en
Pages : 20

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Book Description
Traditional bank competition policy seeks to balance efficiency with incentives to take risk. The main tools are rules guiding entry/exit and consolidation of banks. This paper seeks to refine this view in light of recent changes to financial services provision. Modern banking is largely market-based and contestable. Consequently, banks in advanced economies today have structurally low charter values and high incentives to take risk. In such an environment, traditional policies that seek to affect the degree of competition by focusing on market structure (i.e. concentration) may have limited effect. We argue that bank competition policy should be reoriented to deal with the too-big-to-fail (TBTF) problem. It should also focus on the permissible scope of activities rather than on market structure of banks. And following a crisis, competition policy should facilitate resolution by temporarily allowing higher concentration and government control of banks.

Competition and Currency

Competition and Currency PDF Author: Lawrence H. White
Publisher: NYU Press
ISBN: 0814792243
Category : Business & Economics
Languages : en
Pages : 270

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Book Description
"Lawrence H. White deals with a major issue of the 1990s—reprivatization of money. He makes a cogent argument and presents evidence that private, competing currencies would provide more monetary stability than do central banks. Surprisingly enough, modern private money may emerge first in Eastern Europe, where the gap between the economy's need and the government's money is greates." —Richard Rahn, Vice President and Chief Economists, U.S. Chamber of Commerce. "Boldly, White makes a persuasive case for free banking....In time, we may well look back and regard Competition and Currency as crucial in the development of the economy and economic thought of the future." — The New York City Tribune "White is a leading analyst of a laissez-faire monetary system featuring a privately issued money supply. HIs perceptive insights force a rethinking of our present regulated monetary system and of what kind of reforms will remedy its defects. Avery worthwhile collection of essays for all students of monetary theory." —Philip Cagan, Columbia University "White is a leading analyst of a laissez-faire monetary system featuring a privately issued money supply. HIs perceptive insights force a rethinking of our present regulated monetary system and of what kind of reforms will remedy its defects. A very worthwhile collection of essays for all students of monetary theory." —Phillip Cagan, Columbia University "Newcomers to the literature...would be recommended to start with White's volume, where each paper is self-contained in its handling of particular aspects of free banking...Highly recommended as clear, well-argued expositions of the case for free banking, challenging assumptions common to much of monetary economics. It is particularly apposite that these assumptions be questioned at a time when institutional reform is so much on the agenda." —Sheila C. Dow, The Economic Journal

Essays in Competition Policy, Innovation and Banking Regulation

Essays in Competition Policy, Innovation and Banking Regulation PDF Author: Jacob Seifert
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category : Banking law
Languages : en
Pages : 230

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Essays on Relationship-oriented Bank Lending Arrangements

Essays on Relationship-oriented Bank Lending Arrangements PDF Author: Ozgur Emre Ergungor
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category : Bank loans
Languages : en
Pages : 236

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Book Description