The interest rate elasticity of credit demand and the balance sheet channel of monetary policy transmission in South Africa

It has long been accepted that changes in monetary policy have real economic effects; however, the mechanism by which these policy changes are transmitted to the real economy has been the subject of much debate. Traditionally the transmission mechanism of monetary policy has consisted of various cha...

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Main Author: Doig, Gregory Graham
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: Rhodes University 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1006482
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-rhodes-vital-10522018-06-09T04:06:53ZThe interest rate elasticity of credit demand and the balance sheet channel of monetary policy transmission in South AfricaDoig, Gregory GrahamMonetary policy -- South AfricaBanks and banking -- South AfricaBank loans -- South AfricaFinance -- South AfricaVector autoregression (VAR) approach to econometric modelingFinancial statementsInterest rates -- South AfricaIt has long been accepted that changes in monetary policy have real economic effects; however, the mechanism by which these policy changes are transmitted to the real economy has been the subject of much debate. Traditionally the transmission mechanism of monetary policy has consisted of various channels which include the money channel, the asset price channel and the exchange rate channel. Recent developments in economic theory have led to a relatively new channel of policy transmission, termed the credit channel. The credit channel consists of the bank lending channel as well as the balance sheet channel, and focuses on the demand for credit as the variable of interest. The credit channel is based on the notion that demanders and suppliers of credit face asymmetric information problems which create a gap between the cost of external funds and the cost of internally generated funds, referred to as the wedge. The aim here is to determine the size and lag length effects of changes in credit demand, by both firms as well as households, as a result of changes in interest rates. A secondary, but subordinate, aim is to test for a balance sheet channel of monetary policy transmission. A vector autoregressive (VAR) model is used in conjunction with causality tests, impulse response functions and variance decompositions to achieve the stated objectives. Results indicate that the interest rate elasticity of credit demand, for both firms and households, is interest inelastic and therefore the monetary policy authorities have a limited ability to influence credit demand in the short as well as medium term. In light of the second aim, only weak evidence of a balance sheet channel of policy transmission is found.Rhodes UniversityFaculty of Commerce, Economics and Economic History2013ThesisMastersMCom179 leavespdfvital:1052http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1006482EnglishDoig, Gregory Graham
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Monetary policy -- South Africa
Banks and banking -- South Africa
Bank loans -- South Africa
Finance -- South Africa
Vector autoregression (VAR) approach to econometric modeling
Financial statements
Interest rates -- South Africa
spellingShingle Monetary policy -- South Africa
Banks and banking -- South Africa
Bank loans -- South Africa
Finance -- South Africa
Vector autoregression (VAR) approach to econometric modeling
Financial statements
Interest rates -- South Africa
Doig, Gregory Graham
The interest rate elasticity of credit demand and the balance sheet channel of monetary policy transmission in South Africa
description It has long been accepted that changes in monetary policy have real economic effects; however, the mechanism by which these policy changes are transmitted to the real economy has been the subject of much debate. Traditionally the transmission mechanism of monetary policy has consisted of various channels which include the money channel, the asset price channel and the exchange rate channel. Recent developments in economic theory have led to a relatively new channel of policy transmission, termed the credit channel. The credit channel consists of the bank lending channel as well as the balance sheet channel, and focuses on the demand for credit as the variable of interest. The credit channel is based on the notion that demanders and suppliers of credit face asymmetric information problems which create a gap between the cost of external funds and the cost of internally generated funds, referred to as the wedge. The aim here is to determine the size and lag length effects of changes in credit demand, by both firms as well as households, as a result of changes in interest rates. A secondary, but subordinate, aim is to test for a balance sheet channel of monetary policy transmission. A vector autoregressive (VAR) model is used in conjunction with causality tests, impulse response functions and variance decompositions to achieve the stated objectives. Results indicate that the interest rate elasticity of credit demand, for both firms and households, is interest inelastic and therefore the monetary policy authorities have a limited ability to influence credit demand in the short as well as medium term. In light of the second aim, only weak evidence of a balance sheet channel of policy transmission is found.
author Doig, Gregory Graham
author_facet Doig, Gregory Graham
author_sort Doig, Gregory Graham
title The interest rate elasticity of credit demand and the balance sheet channel of monetary policy transmission in South Africa
title_short The interest rate elasticity of credit demand and the balance sheet channel of monetary policy transmission in South Africa
title_full The interest rate elasticity of credit demand and the balance sheet channel of monetary policy transmission in South Africa
title_fullStr The interest rate elasticity of credit demand and the balance sheet channel of monetary policy transmission in South Africa
title_full_unstemmed The interest rate elasticity of credit demand and the balance sheet channel of monetary policy transmission in South Africa
title_sort interest rate elasticity of credit demand and the balance sheet channel of monetary policy transmission in south africa
publisher Rhodes University
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1006482
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