The Uncertainty of China"s Economic Policy and Bank Credit Supply

2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (4) ◽  
pp. 41-67
Author(s):  
Wen Wen ◽  
Kwang Soo Park
2007 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 51-78
Author(s):  
Harmanta Harmanta ◽  
Dr. Mahyus Ekananda

The goal of this paper is to analyze the determinants of bank credit declining, whether is dominated by the supply or the credit demand, post the financial crisis in Indonesia. This paper is a sort of New Keynesian approach, which pre assume the imperfectness of the credit market and hence create disequilibrium.Using the switching regression model and Maximum Likelihood Estimation to determine the probability of supply or demand determination, the result shows the existence of excess demand of credit during the crisis period, 1997/ 1998, confirming the credit crunch situation. After the crisis, the condition is reversed, where the credit supply is higher than the credit demand. The two findings implicitely shows the inflexibility of interest rate to equalize the credit market.JEL: D43, D82, E44, E51Keywords : Disintermediasi, kredit, disequilibrium, maximum likelihood, persamaan simultan, switching regression


2018 ◽  
Vol 53 (4) ◽  
pp. 1839-1870
Author(s):  
Lee Jeremy Cohen ◽  
Marcia Millon Cornett ◽  
Hamid Mehran ◽  
Hassan Tehranian

We find the financial condition of states impacts bank credit supply through their municipal bond holdings. In particular, we treat sudden political and statutory actions during the 2011 union bargaining rights debates in Wisconsin and Ohio as exogenous shocks to state solvency. We show bank valuations and municipal bond spreads adjust to the announcements, and, over longer horizons, a new lending channel linked to state solvency emerges, whereby banks supply credit as municipal bond appreciations free up capital.


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