Discussion paper

DP20180 Monetary Policy Transmission, Bank Market Power, and Income Source

We provide empirical evidence on banks’ market power in financial services and its implications for monetary policy transmission through deposit rates. Banks with market power in financial services charge higher fees for their service and also offer lower deposit rates with less pass-through from monetary policy. We argue that this is the result of product tying: consumers must open a deposit account to access a bank’s financial services. We develop and calibrate a quantitative model of the U.S. banking industry where banks generate non-interest income from services in addition to a standard loan-deposit model. Counterfactuals emphasize the importance of non-interest income for credit supply, financial stability, and deposit pricing.

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Citation

Gödl-Hanisch, I and J Pandolfo (2025), ‘DP20180 Monetary Policy Transmission, Bank Market Power, and Income Source‘, CEPR Discussion Paper No. 20180. CEPR Press, Paris & London. https://cepr.org/publications/dp20180