What is it about?
The purpose of this paper is to examine monetary policies and bank lending in the emerging economies of Sub-Sahara Africa. The dynamic system-generalized method of moments (GMM) that overcomes issues of unobserved period and country-specific effects, as well as potential endogeneity of explanatory variables, is applied in the estimation exercise. The study uses the data for 80 banks across 20 Sub-Saharan African countries from 2010 to 2019.
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Why is it important?
The findings show that expansionary monetary policy such as an increase in money supply stimulates bank lending, while contractionary monetary policies like increase in the monetary policy rates by the central banks lead to credit contraction, albeit a weak effect due to possible underdevelopment of financial markets, institutional constraints, bank concentration and other rigidities in the system characteristic of developing countries that undermine the effectiveness of monetary policy transmission. Capital adequacy ratio and size of economic activities are other variables that significantly influence bank lending channels.
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This page is a summary of: Monetary policies and bank lending in developing countries: evidence from Sub-Sahara Africa, Journal of Economics and Development, January 2022, Emerald,
DOI: 10.1108/jed-09-2021-0144.
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