Does the Bank Lending Channel of Monetary Transmission Work in Turkey?


Book Description

Does the bank lending channel of monetary transmission work in Turkey? Using the May- June 2006 financial turbulence as an exogenous shock that prompted a significant tightening of monetary policy, this paper examines the loan supply response of Turkey's banks, depending on their balance sheet characteristics. The empirical results indicate that banks can play a role in Turkey's monetary transmission mechanism. Specifically, bank liquidity is found to have a significant effect on loan supply in Turkey. This suggests that the effect of monetary policy in Turkey can be propagated by the banking sector, depending on its liquidity position.




Does the Bank Lending Channel of Monetary Transmission Work in Turkey?


Book Description

Does the bank lending channel of monetary transmission work in Turkey? Using the May- June 2006 financial turbulence as an exogenous shock that prompted a significant tightening of monetary policy, this paper examines the loan supply response of Turkey's banks, depending on their balance sheet characteristics. The empirical results indicate that banks can play a role in Turkey's monetary transmission mechanism. Specifically, bank liquidity is found to have a significant effect on loan supply in Turkey. This suggests that the effect of monetary policy in Turkey can be propagated by the banking sector, depending on its liquidity position.




The Bank Lending Channel of Monetary Transmission


Book Description

Does the bank lending channel of monetary transmission work in Turkey? Using the May- June 2006 financial turbulence as an exogenous shock that prompted a significant tightening of monetary policy, this paper examines the loan supply response of Turkey's banks, depending on their balance sheet characteristics. the empirical results indicate that banks can play a role in Turkey's monetary transmission mechanism. Specifically, bank liquidity is found to have a significant effect on loan supply in Turkey. This suggests that the effect of monetary policy in Turkey can be propagated by the banking sector, depending on its liquidity position.




Bank Lending in Turkey


Book Description

The period following the 2000-01 crisis was marked by a successful disinflation program sustained through inflation targeting and fiscal discipline in Turkey. This paper studies the impact of monetary and fiscal policies on credit growth during this period. Using quarterly bank-level data covering 2002-08, we find evidence that liquidity-constrained banks have sharper decline in lending during contractionary monetary policies and that crowding-out effect disappears more for banks with a retail-banking focus when fiscal policies are prudent.The results are statistically weak, suggesting that bank lending channel is not strong in Turkey and government finances has limited direct impact on credit.













Has the Bank Lending Channel Changed in Turkey After the Crisis in 2001?


Book Description

This contribution investigates the role of Turkish banks in the monetary transmission mechanism, focusing on bank lending channel, over the time horizon 2002-2016. This study deploys a Bayesian stochastic frontier approach for our estimates. Literature shows that bank specific characteristics (e.g., liquidity) can have a significant impact on the provision of credit as well as changes in a bank's loan portfolio, alongside the banks main characteristics (e.g., loan and receivable). Hence, this study enriches the standard analysis by evaluating Turkish banks technical and allocative efficiencies as well as the impact on the monetary policy stance for the Central Turkish Bank. Specifically, this research considers the sub-periods 2002-2008 and 2008-2016 to examine how monetary policy shocks influenced the credit and lending channel functioning in Turkey, especially after the major restructuring programme in 2000-2001. Given our unique dataset, empirical evidence suggests cross-sectional heterogeneity in bank response to monetary policy changes during 2002-2016. Based on the results of both pre- and post-crisis periods, the study finds that an operative bank lending channel has been existing in Turkey. Particularly, it emerges that monetary policy changes on bank credit supply affects bank differently based on their characteristics. Moreover, our findings confirm that banks with weaker capital positions, greater dependence on market funding and non-interest sources of income restricted the loan supply more strongly in case of any monetary shocks. Eventually, our results are in line with Akinci et al. (2013) who found that domestic banks are unexpectedly more efficient than foreign banks.




Monetary Policy and Banking Sector


Book Description

We find evidence that monetary policy influenced bank lending in Turkey in the period 1991 - 2007 both directly through the money lending channel and indirectly through the bank lending channel. The bank lending channel is shown to depend on two bank characteristics, namely liquidity and capital. We also find that both capital and GDP growth have plausible positive and significant long-run effects on bank loan growth, whereas inflation, bank size and, in particular, efficiency do not have a significant equilibrium relationship with loan growth. This latter result is despite our finding that the efficiency of all Turkish banks improved over the period. It is also evident that domestic banks are, unexpectedly, found to be more efficient, on average, than foreign banks. We discovered no evidence of significant dynamics or fixed-effects in the growth of loans and so prefer to use the pooled OLS estimator over the fixed-effects and Arellano and Bond estimators. We therefore caution against assuming the existence of fixed-effects and dynamics in such models as this may adversely affect inference.