Credit Matters: Empirical Evidence on U.S. Macro-Financial Linkages
29 Pages Posted: 16 Jul 2008
Date Written: July 2008
Abstract
This paper develops a framework for analyzing macro-financial linkages in the United States. We estimate the effects of a negative shock to banks' capital/asset ratio on lending standards, which in turn affect consumer credit, mortgages, and corporate loans, and the corresponding components of private spending (consumption, residential investment and business investment). In addition, our empirical model allows for feedback from spending and income to bank capital adequacy and credit. Hence, we trace the full credit cycle. An exogenous fall in the bank capital/asset ratio by one percentage point reduces real GDP by some 1½ percent through its effects on credit availability, while an exogenous fall in demand of 1 percent of GDP is gradually magnified to around 2 percent through financial feedback effects.
Keywords: United States, Credit, External shocks, Capital markets, Asset ratio, Consumer credit, Corporate sector, Loans, Gross domestic product
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?
Recommended Papers
-
A Practical Model-Based Approach to Monetary Policy Analysis - Overview
By Andrew Berg, Philippe D. Karam, ...
-
Practical Model-Based Monetary Policy Analysis: A How-To Guide
By Andrew Berg, Philippe D. Karam, ...
-
A U.S. Financial Conditions Index: Putting Credit Where Credit is Due
-
Foreign Entanglements: Estimating the Source and Size of Spillovers Across Industrial Countries
By Tamim Bayoumi and Andrew J. Swiston
-
Foreign Entanglements: Estimating the Source and Size of Spillovers Across Industrial Countries
By Tamim Bayoumi and Andrew J. Swiston
-
Endogenous Monetary Policy Credibility in a Small Macro Model of Israel
By Eyal Argov, Natan P. Epstein, ...
-
By Douglas Laxton, David Rose, ...
-
A Small Quarterly Projection Model of the US Economy
By Ioan Carabenciov, Igor Ermolaev, ...