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NON-CORE BANK LIABILITIES AND CREDIT GROWTH: EVIDENCE FROM AN EMERGING ECONOMY
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Abstract
- The composition of bank liabilities has captured a lot of attention especially after the global financial crisis of 2008-2009. It is argued that a compositional change in non-core liabilities reflects the different stages of financial cycle. Banks usually fund their credits with core liabilities, which grow with households' wealth, but when there is a faster growth in credits compared to deposits, the banks often resort to non-core liabilities to meet the excess demand for loans. This chapter analyses the relationship between non-core liabilities and credits in a small open economy, namely Turkey. It investigates the relationship under alternative settings and presents consistent evidence on a robust relationship between credits and non-core liabilities under all frameworks. The study also verifies that elevated demand for credit may induce some increase in non-core liabilities. Finally, the relationship between non-core liabilities and credit growth is also affirmed in the long run.
- Subjects :
- credits
small open economy
Core liabilities
non-core liabilities
VECM
VAR
Subjects
Details
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Accession number :
- edsair.dris...02022..d62098ba865c6bed46aefb8d6454118d