Sovereign stress, banking stress, and the monetary transmission mechanism in the Euro area / Oliver Holtemöller, Jan-Christopher Scherer
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1012334430
URN
urn:nbn:de:gbv:3:2-84771
DOI
ISBN
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Autorin / Autor
Beiträger
Körperschaft
Erschienen
Halle (Saale), Germany : Halle Institute for Economic Research (IWH) - Member of the Leibniz Association, [02. Februar 2018]
Umfang
1 Online-Ressource (III, 32 Seiten, 0,76 MB) : Diagramme
Ausgabevermerk
Sprache
eng
Anmerkungen
Inhaltliche Zusammenfassung
banking stress, firms’ financing conditions, government bond yields, interest rate channel, monetary policy transmission, sovereign stress
In this paper, we investigate to what extent sovereign stress and banking stress have contributed to the increase in the level and in the heterogeneity of nonfinancial firms' financing costs in the Euro area during the European debt crisis and how both have affected the monetary transmission mechanism. Employing a large firm-level data set containing two million observations, we are able to identify the effect of government bond yield spreads (sovereign stress) and the share of non-performing loans (banking stress) on firms' financing costs in a panel model by assuming that idiosyncratic shocks to individual firms are uncorrelated with country-specific variables. We find that the two sources of stress have increased firms' financing costs controlling for country and firm-specific factors. Moreover, we estimate both to have significantly impaired the monetary transmission mechanism.
Schriftenreihe
IWH-Diskussionspapiere ; 2018, no. 3 (February 2018) ppn:837399270