Expectations and Credit Slumps
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Series
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Speaker(s)Jasmine Xiao (University of Notre Dame, United States)
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FieldMacroeconomics
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LocationTinbergen Institute Amsterdam, room 1.01
Amsterdam -
Date and time
March 23, 2023
16:00 - 17:15
Abstract
Since the 2008-09 financial crisis, U.S. bank lending has been slow to
recover, despite the period of very low interest rates. We show that
banks do not process information efficiently, and this is a
quantitatively important explanation for credit slumps after 2008. Using
a new dataset of bank expectations, we find that banks over-extrapolate
the past, and their lending decisions are sensitive to beliefs. The
behavioral bias matters more for large banks, whose loan portfolios are
more sensitive to beliefs. To quantify the economic significance of
imperfect expectations, we build a dynamic model with heterogeneous
banks that are over-extrapolative and face a small risk of economic
disaster. We show that a realistic degree of over-extrapolation
estimated from the data generates the pace of credit and real recovery
observed after the crisis. Banks' distorted beliefs hamper the
effectiveness of policy tools, such as quantitative easing (QE)
programs.
Joint paper with Antonio Falato (Fed Board).