Who Gets the Credit? And Does it Matter? Household vs Firm Lending Across Countries

T.H.L. Beck, B. Büyükkarabacak, F. Rioja, N. Valev

Research output: Working paperDiscussion paperOther research output

Abstract

While theory predicts different effects of household credit and enterprise credit on the economy, the empirical literature has mainly used aggregate measures of overall bank lending to the private sector. We construct a new dataset from 45 developed and developing countries, decomposing bank lending into lending to enterprises and lending to households and assess the different effects of these two components on real sector outcomes. We find that: 1) enterprise credit raises economic growth whereas household credit has no effect; 2) enterprise credit reduces income inequality whereas household credit has no effect; and 3) household credit is negatively associated with excess consumption sensitivity, while there is no relationship between enterprise credit and excess consumption sensitivity.
Original languageEnglish
Place of PublicationTilburg
PublisherEBC
Number of pages41
Volume2009-12
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2009

Publication series

NameEBC Discussion Paper
Volume2009-12

Keywords

  • Financial Intermediation
  • Household Credit
  • Firm Credit

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