Hazardous Times for Monetary Policy: What Do Twenty-Three Million Bank Loans Say About the Effects of Monetary Policy on Credit Risk-Taking?
Bank of Spain · Swiss Finance Institute · +2 more institutions
Abstract
We identify the effects of monetary policy on credit risk-taking with an exhaustive credit register of loan applications and contracts. We separate the changes in the composition of the supply of credit from the concurrent changes in the volume of supply and quality, and the volume of demand. We employ a two-stage model that analyzes the granting of loan applications in the first stage and loan outcomes for the applications granted in the second stage, and that controls for both observed and unobserved, time-varying, firm and bank heterogeneity through time*firm and time*bank fixed effects. We find that a lower overnight interest rate induces lowly capitalized banks to grant more loan applications to ex ante…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 143.44
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 162
Authors
4- GJGabriel JiménezCorresponding
Bank of Spain
- SOSteven Ongena
Swiss Finance Institute
- JPJosé-Luis Peydró
Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Barcelona School of Economics
- JSJesús Saurina
Bank of Spain
Topics & keywords
- Collateral
- Loan
- Monetary economics
- Monetary policy
- Interest rate
- Commit
- Economics
- Ex-ante