Loan interest rate pass-through and changes after the financial crisis: Japan’s evidence
•New evidence on loan interest rate pass-through using Japan’s bank-level panel dataset.•Banks with a high proportion of relationship lending tend to set lower pass-through.•Borrowing firms’ characteristics is an additional important determinant for pass-through.•In contrast to European countries, p...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of the Japanese and international economies 2016-12, Vol.42, p.10-30 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | •New evidence on loan interest rate pass-through using Japan’s bank-level panel dataset.•Banks with a high proportion of relationship lending tend to set lower pass-through.•Borrowing firms’ characteristics is an additional important determinant for pass-through.•In contrast to European countries, pass-through has changed in Japan after the globalfinancial crisis.•Multiple reasons explain changes in Japans loan interest pass-through after the global financial crisis.
We estimate interest rate pass-through in the loan market using an individual bank-based panel dataset from Japan. Previous studies using data from European countries have presented a number of common findings, including that banks with a high proportion of relationship lending tend to set lower pass-through. In this respect, we have obtained similar results using a dataset for Japan going back to the early 2000s. We further examine the influence of borrowing firms’ balance sheet characteristics on loan interest rate pass-through, and find that these additional factors are also important determinants for pass-through dispersion. However, after the recent global financial crisis, even banks with a high proportion of relationship lending have largely lowered loan interest rates by raising pass-through, and pass-through has not necessarily been determined in accordance with borrowing firms’ balance sheet characteristics. These results differ from those of recent studies on European countries. Possible background factors explaining this change are that (i) pressure to lower loan interest rates has risen due to extensive monetary easing and greater lending competition among banks, while Japan’s banking system as a whole has maintained its resilience in the post-crisis period; (ii) demand for bank loans has increased substantially due to disruptions in the market for alternative funding sources, such as commercial paper and corporate bonds; and (iii) public measures to increase bank loans have been broadly introduced in Japan. |
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ISSN: | 0889-1583 1095-8681 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.jjie.2016.10.002 |