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The Bank Lending Channel: Lessons from the Crisis


Leonardo Gambacorta


Bank for International Settlements (BIS); Bank of Italy

David Marques-Ibanez


European Central Bank (ECB)

May 2011

ECB Working Paper No. 1335

Abstract:     
The 2007-2010 financial crisis highlighted the central role of financial intermediaries’ stability in buttressing a smooth transmission of credit to borrowers. While results from the years prior to the crisis often cast doubts on the strength of the bank lending channel, recent evidence shows that bank-specific characteristics can have a large impact on the provision of credit. We show that new factors, such as changes in banks’ business models and market funding patterns, had modified the monetary transmission mechanism in Europe and in the US prior to the crisis, and demonstrate the existence of structural changes during the period of financial crisis. Banks with weaker core capital positions, greater dependence on market funding and on non-interest sources of income restricted the loan supply more strongly during the crisis period. These findings support the Basel III focus on banks’ core capital and on funding liquidity risks. They also call for a more forward-looking approach to the statistical data coverage of the banking sector by central banks. In particular, there should be a stronger focus on monitoring those financial factors that are likely to influence the functioning of the monetary transmission mechanism particularly in a period of crisis.

Number of Pages in PDF File: 40

Keywords: bank lending channel, monetary policy, financial innovation

JEL Classification: E51, E52, E44

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Date posted: May 18, 2011  

Suggested Citation

Gambacorta, Leonardo and Marques-Ibanez, David, The Bank Lending Channel: Lessons from the Crisis (May 2011). ECB Working Paper No. 1335. Available at SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=1814042

Contact Information

Leonardo Gambacorta (Contact Author)
Bank for International Settlements (BIS) ( email )
Centralbahnplatz 2
Basel, 4002
Switzerland
Bank of Italy ( email )
Via Nazionale 91
Rome, 00184
Italy
David Marques-Ibanez
European Central Bank (ECB) ( email )
Kaiserstrasse 29
Frankfurt am Main, D-60311
Germany
49 6913 44 6460 (Phone)
49 6913 44 6460 (Fax)
Feedback to SSRN (Beta)


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