Discussion paper

DP12171 Financial Development and Monetary Policy: Loan Applications, Rates, and Real Effects

The finance-growth literature argues that institutional constraints in developing countries impede financial intermediation and monetary policy transmission. Recent studies using aggregate data document a weak bank lending channel. For identification, we instead exploit Uganda’s super- visory credit register, with loan applications and rates, and unanticipated variation in monetary policy. A monetary tightening strongly reduces credit supply—increasing loan application rejections and tightening volume and rates—especially for banks with more leverage and sovereign debt exposure (even within the same borrower-period). There are spillovers on inflation and eco- nomic activity, especially in more financially-developed areas, including on commercial building, trade, and social unrest.

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Citation

Peydro, J, C Abuka, R Alinda, A Presbitero and C Minoiu (2017), ‘DP12171 Financial Development and Monetary Policy: Loan Applications, Rates, and Real Effects‘, CEPR Discussion Paper No. 12171. CEPR Press, Paris & London. https://cepr.org/publications/dp12171