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Bank capital: excess credit and crisis incidence

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  • Ray Barrell

    (Research Centre of the National Institute of Economic and Social Research (NIESR))

  • Karim Dilruba

Abstract

There are large and long-lasting negative effects on output from recurrent financial crises in market economies. Policy makers need to know if these financial crises are endogenous and subject to policy interventions or are exogenous events like earthquakes. We survey the literature about the links between credit growth and crises over the last 130 years. We then go on to look at the determinants of financial crises both narrowly and broadly defined in market economies, stressing the roles of bank capital, available on book liquidity, property price bubbles and current account deficits. We look at the role of credit growth, which is often seen as the main link between the macroeconomy and crises, and stress that it is largely absent. We look at the role of the core factors discussed above in market economies from 1980 to 2017. We suggest that crises are largely unrelated to credit developments but are influenced by banking sector behaviour. We conclude that policy makers need to contain banking excesses, not constrain the macroeconomy by directly reducing bank lending.

Suggested Citation

  • Ray Barrell & Karim Dilruba, 2020. "Bank capital: excess credit and crisis incidence," Sciences Po publications info:hdl:2441/71b87sa9s88, Sciences Po.
  • Handle: RePEc:spo:wpmain:info:hdl:2441/71b87sa9s888hpa0qfc4jlo1od
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    References listed on IDEAS

    as
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    Keywords

    Financial stability; Banking crises; Macroprudential policy;
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