Banking Market Competition, Opaque Firms, and the Reallocation Component of Aggregate Growth
R. Inklaar, Michael Koetter, Felix Noth
Abstract
Read article
Vierteljährliche Konjunkturberichterstattung für das Land Sachsen-Anhalt - Die gesamtwirtschaftliche Lage im 2. Quartal 2013 -
Brigitte Loose, Hans-Ulrich Brautzsch, Franziska Exß
One-off Publications,
No. 2,
2013
Abstract
Die Wirtschaft in Sachsen-Anhalt schwenkt nach der Schwäche im Winterhalbjahr wieder auf Wachstumskurs ein. Damit vollzieht das preisbereinigte Bruttoinlandsprodukt in Sachsen-Anhalt tendenziell eine ähnliche Entwicklung wie in Deutschland insgesamt. Sehr wesentlich dazu beigetragen haben Aufholeffekte nach der witterungsbedingten Produktionsschwäche zu Jahresbeginn, die sich vor allem in einer Aufwärtsbewegung der Wertschöpfung im Baugewerbe und den baunahen Vorleistungsbranchen zeigt. Darüber hinaus zeichnet sich aber auch eine Erholung bei der Herstellung von Verbrauchs- und Investitionsgütern ab, wobei insbesondere das Ausland wieder eine größere Rolle als Absatzgebiet spielt. Maßgeblich dürften die sich allmählich bessernden Absatzperspektiven im Euroraum nach dem Ende der Rezession dort sein.
Read article
Granularity in Banking and Growth: Does Financial Openness Matter?
Franziska Bremus, Claudia M. Buch
CESifo Working Paper No. 4356, August,
2013
Abstract
We explore the impact of large banks and of financial openness for aggregate growth. Large banks matter because of granular effects: if markets are very concentrated in terms of the size distribution of banks, idiosyncratic shocks at the bank-level do not cancel out in the aggregate but can affect macroeconomic outcomes. Financial openness may affect GDP growth in and of itself, and it may also influence concentration in banking and thus the impact of bank-specific shocks for the aggregate economy. To test these relationships, we use different measures of de jure and de facto financial openness in a linked micro-macro panel dataset. Our research has three main findings: First, bank-level shocks significantly impact on GDP. Second, financial openness lowers GDP growth. Third, granular effects tend to be stronger in financially closed economies.
Read article
Transfer Payments without Growth: Evidence for German Regions, 1992–2005
Michael Koetter, Michael Wedow
International Journal of Urban and Regional Research,
No. 4,
2013
Abstract
After German reunification, interregional subsidies accounted for approximately 4% of gross fixed capital investment in the new federal states (i.e. those which were formerly part of the German Democratic Republic). We show that, between 1992 and 2005, infrastructure and corporate investment subsidies had a negative net impact on regional economic growth and convergence. This result is robust to both the specification of spatially weighted control variables and the use of instrumental variable techniques to control for the endogeneity of subsidies. Our results suggest that regional redistribution was ineffective, potentially due to a lack of spatial concentration to create growth poles.
Read article
Macroeconomic Factors and Micro-Level Bank Risk
Claudia M. Buch
Bundesbank Discussion Paper 20/2010,
2010
Abstract
The interplay between banks and the macroeconomy is of key importance for financial and economic stability. We analyze this link using a factor-augmented vector autoregressive model (FAVAR) which extends a standard VAR for the U.S. macroeconomy. The model includes GDP growth, inflation, the Federal Funds rate, house price inflation, and a set of factors summarizing conditions in the banking sector. We use data of more than 1,500 commercial banks from the U.S. call reports to address the following questions. How are macroeconomic shocks transmitted to bank risk and other banking variables? What are the sources of bank heterogeneity, and what explains differences in individual banks’ responses to macroeconomic shocks? Our paper has two main findings: (i) Average bank risk declines, and average bank lending increases following expansionary shocks. (ii) The heterogeneity of banks is characterized by idiosyncratic shocks and the asymmetric transmission of common shocks. Risk of about 1/3 of all banks rises in response to a monetary loosening. The lending response of small, illiquid, and domestic banks is relatively large, and risk of banks with a low degree of capitalization and a high exposure to real estate loans decreases relatively strongly after expansionary monetary policy shocks. Also, lending of larger banks increases less while risk of riskier and domestic banks reacts more in response to house price shocks.
Read article
Vierteljährliche Konjunkturberichterstattung für das Land Sachsen-Anhalt - Die gesamtwirtschaftliche Lage im 1. Quartal 2013 -
Brigitte Loose, Hans-Ulrich Brautzsch, Franziska Exß
One-off Publications,
No. 1,
2013
Abstract
Das Konjunkturbild für Sachsen-Anhalt bleibt auch im ersten Quartal 2013 weitgehend gedämpft. Die Wertschöpfung Sachsen-Anhalts erreicht zu Jahresbeginn sogar einen neuen lokalen Tiefpunkt seit Ende der großen Rezession im Jahr 2009. Die seit Sommer vergangenen Jahres zu beobachtende Konjunkturschwäche hat sich angesichts der immer wieder neu entflammenden
Eurokrise und der schwachen Weltkonjunktur zuletzt weiter fortgesetzt. So blieb
die Industrie nochmals hinter ihrem Vorquartalsergebnis zurück. Positiv zu vermelden ist aber, dass sich der Rückgang in der Industrie zuletzt etwas abgeschwächt hat. Der außerordentlich kräftige Rückgang des Bruttoinlandsprodukts von 0,7% gegenüber dem Schlussquartal 2012 (vgl. Tabelle 1) ist zum größten Teil dem langanhaltenden Winter geschuldet. Starke
Rückschläge musste vor allem das Baugewerbe hinnehmen; aber auch im Handel und Verkehr ist die Wertschöpfung wohl aufgrund des Winters deutlich gesunken.
Read article
The Term Structure of Sovereign Default Risk in EMU Member Countries and Its Determinants
Stefan Eichler, Dominik Maltritz
Journal of Banking and Finance,
No. 6,
2013
Abstract
We analyze the determinants of sovereign default risk of EMU member states using government bond yield spreads as risk indicators. We focus on default risk for different time spans indicated by spreads for different maturities. Using a panel framework we analyze whether there are different drivers of default risk for different maturities. We find that lower economic growth and larger openness increase default risk for all maturities. Higher indebtedness only increases short-term risk, whereas net lending, trade balance and interest rate costs only drive long-term default risk.
Read article
Competitiveness Research Network – First Year Results
Filippo di Mauro
CompNet Report,
June
2013
Abstract
This interim report summarises the main findings of the Competitiveness Research Network (CompNet) after one year of existence. The Network is organized in three workstreams related to: (i) aggregate measures of competitiveness; (ii) firm-level studies; and (iii) global value chains (GVCs). The main objectives of the Network are to improve the existing frameworks and indicators of competitiveness across all dimensions (macro, micro and cross-border) and establish a more solid connection between identified competitiveness drivers and resulting outcomes (trade, aggregate productivity, employment, growth and essentially welfare), in order to support the design of adequate policies.
Read article