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Macroprudential policy and its impact on the credit cycle

Journal of Financial Stability 2021 53, 100818
We identify a novel set of macroprudential policy shocks and estimate their effects on credit cycle variables in a panel of 13 EU countries between 1999 and 2018. We find that a typical macroprudential policy tightening shock reduces bank credit-to-GDP by 2.4% points and household credit-to-GDP by 2.2% points over a period of four years. The non-financial corporations and total credit-to-GDP ratios, however, do not react significantly. Using state-dependent local projections, we further find that the effects on the credit-to-GDP ratios are stronger in credit cycle upturns than in downturns. We also detect a sizable leakage of firm credit from the banking to the non-banking sector next to a shift from household to firm credit.

Heterogeneous Government Spending Multipliers in the Era Surrounding the Great Recession

The Review of Economics and Statistics 2020 102(2), 304-322 open access
We use novel quarterly data of U.S. states to examine the dynamics of relative spending multipliers in the decade surrounding the Great Recession. While multipliers were around 1 in expansions, they reached values above 4 when a state was in a recession. Also a high (low) degree of household indebtedness augmented (lowered) a state's multiplier by 0.5 in expansions and 2 in recessions. We further document modest positive spillover effects across states and show that a mere redistribution of spending across states also had a significant influence on the aggregate U.S. economy due to cross-state heterogeneity of the effects.