Evidence about commercial banks' liquidity preference says the following about the loan market in less developed countries (LDCs): (i) the loan interest rate is a minimum mark-up rate; (ii) the loan market is characterized by oligopoly power; and (iii) indirect monetary policy, a cornerstone of financial liberalization, can only be effective at very high interest rates that are likely to be deflationary. The minimum rate is a mark-up over an exogenous foreign interest rate, marginal transaction costs, and a risk premium. In order to present its case, the paper utilizes and extends the oligopoly model of the banking firm. A calibration exercise demonstrates that the hypothesis of a minimum mark-up loan rate is largely consistent with the obs...
This paper analyses how entry by an international bank into a developing economy a¤ects the credit m...
We report evidence that bank liquidity ratios (liquid assets as a percentage of total assets) decrea...
Norges Bank’s instrument for achieving the objective of low and stable inflation is the key policy r...
Evidence about commercial banks ’ liquidity preference says the following about the loan market in l...
Evidence about developing countries’ commercial banks’ liquidity preference suggests the following a...
What does excess bank liquidity say about the loan market in Less Developed Countries
Previous studies have documented the tendency for the commercial banking sector of many developing e...
[[abstract]]Lending via commitment provides liquidity and interest rate discovery. These two concept...
This paper presents a simple general equilibrium model of the commercial loan market in which liquid...
This paper tests empirically the linkage between banks' investment and interbank lending decisions i...
Our investigation of the association between bank market power and liquidity in 101 countries reveal...
Most studies of the liquidity trap emphasize the zero bound benchmark policy rate. This paper integr...
The liquidity position of the banking sector is defined as the net financial claim of commercial ban...
One of the main aims of financial liberalisation was to increase banking sector competition. Differe...
The paper shows that commercial banks’ ability to lower deposit interest rates (market power) can in...
This paper analyses how entry by an international bank into a developing economy a¤ects the credit m...
We report evidence that bank liquidity ratios (liquid assets as a percentage of total assets) decrea...
Norges Bank’s instrument for achieving the objective of low and stable inflation is the key policy r...
Evidence about commercial banks ’ liquidity preference says the following about the loan market in l...
Evidence about developing countries’ commercial banks’ liquidity preference suggests the following a...
What does excess bank liquidity say about the loan market in Less Developed Countries
Previous studies have documented the tendency for the commercial banking sector of many developing e...
[[abstract]]Lending via commitment provides liquidity and interest rate discovery. These two concept...
This paper presents a simple general equilibrium model of the commercial loan market in which liquid...
This paper tests empirically the linkage between banks' investment and interbank lending decisions i...
Our investigation of the association between bank market power and liquidity in 101 countries reveal...
Most studies of the liquidity trap emphasize the zero bound benchmark policy rate. This paper integr...
The liquidity position of the banking sector is defined as the net financial claim of commercial ban...
One of the main aims of financial liberalisation was to increase banking sector competition. Differe...
The paper shows that commercial banks’ ability to lower deposit interest rates (market power) can in...
This paper analyses how entry by an international bank into a developing economy a¤ects the credit m...
We report evidence that bank liquidity ratios (liquid assets as a percentage of total assets) decrea...
Norges Bank’s instrument for achieving the objective of low and stable inflation is the key policy r...