Excess reserves and economic activity

This paper examines endogenous excess reserve holdings in the banking sector of an otherwise standard DSGE environment. Excess reserves act as an extensive margin of bank lending that is inactive in traditional limited participation models where banks hold minimal reserves by assumption. The results...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of economic dynamics & control 2015-03, Vol.52, p.17-31
Hauptverfasser: Dressler, Scott J., Kersting, Erasmus K.
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description This paper examines endogenous excess reserve holdings in the banking sector of an otherwise standard DSGE environment. Excess reserves act as an extensive margin of bank lending that is inactive in traditional limited participation models where banks hold minimal reserves by assumption. The results suggest that this extensive margin of bank lending can dampen and even overturn the standard liquidity effect of monetary contractions. When the liquidity effect is overturned, a monetary contraction results in an increase in output. In addition, the model predicts that changes in the interest rate paid on reserves can deliver large, short-run responses.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.jedc.2014.11.015
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source ScienceDirect Journals (5 years ago - present)
subjects Bank loans
Bank reserves
Banking
Economic activity
Economic dynamics
Economic models
Economic theory
Excess reserves
Financial intermediation
Interest rates
Liquidity
Liquidity effect
Studies
title Excess reserves and economic activity
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