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Title: Titel


1
Assessment of private sector credit developments
in CESEE countries 11th ECB-CFS conference on
The Market for Retail Financial Services
Development, Integration, and Economic
Effects Prague, October 21, 2008 Based on
research and analytical work by Peter Backé,
Markus Eller (OeNB) Balázs Égert (OECD,
Economics Department) and Tina Zumer (Banka
Slovenije) in essence an update of ECB working
paper No. 687, Oct. 2006
2
Overview
  • Basic definitions and methodological framework
  • Deviation of realized private credit to GDP from
    its long-run equilibrium in 11 CESEE countries
  • Recent credit growth developments and
    sustainability considerations

3
Basic Definitions
  • Financial deepening
  • domestic private credit to non-banks in of GDP
    increases as a function of underlying
    fundamentals
  • Baseline equation
  • Fundamentals GDP per capita, bank credit to the
    government in of GDP (crowding-out effects),
    lending interest rates, producer price inflation,
    interest spread (proxy for financial
    liberalization)
  • Behavioral definition of equilibrium
  • Equilibrium level of private-sector credit to
    GDP as justified by fundamentals
  • Deviations from equilibrium cannot be
    explained by fundamentals

4
Methodological Setting (1)
  • Two-stage panel out-of-sample approach
  • As proposed by Maeso-Fernandez, Osbat, Schnatz
    (2005), Economic Systems, for equilibrium
    exchange rate estimations
  • (1) Estimation stage (in-sample panel)
  • Verify for the baseline equation the presence of
    cointegration
  • Estimate the long-run relationship among
    integrated variables in the panel framework
  • fixed-effect OLS (FE-OLS)
  • panel dynamic OLS (DOLS)
  • mean group estimation (MGE) following Pesaran,
    Shin, Smith (1999)
  • Various subpanels large and small OECD
    countries, non-European emerging market
    economies, CESEE countries

5
Methodological Setting (2)
  • (2) Simulation stage fit equilibrium levels
  • Apply the structural relationship of stage (1) to
    get equilibrium private-sector credit to GDP
    levels,
  • i.e., calculate fitted values for Cp/GDP, using
    the estimated long-run coefficients of stage (1)
    and realized values for the fundamentals
  • Crucial issue upwards bias of stage-1-estimates
    b/c of initial undershooting in the case of
    transition countries
  • Solution out-of-sample
  • Use stage-1-estimates for non-transition
    benchmark countries to calculate the fits in
    stage (2) for transition countries
  • Remarks / Prerequisites
  • For country-specific constant terms the largest
    and smallest estimates for stage-1 country-fixed
    effects are used spectrum of equilibrium credit
    ratios
  • Long-run parameter homogeneity b/w benchmark
    countries and transition countries (i.e. ongoing
    structural convergence)
  • Stable structural relationship in benchmark
    countries over time (for updates required)

6
Stage (1) Data and Results
  • Data
  • Quarterly data for 43 countries
  • Observations up to Q4/2004, starting dates for
    the subpanels
  • OECD countries 1975-1980
  • Non-European emerging market economies 1980-1993
  • Transition economies (11 CESEEs) 1996
  • Results
  • GDP per capita positive for EMEs, not always
    significant for CEE
  • Public sector borrowing negative for EMEs and
    CEE (crowding out), not however for SEE
  • Lending rates negative for CEE, but not for SEE
    and EMEs
  • Inflation rate strongly negative for EMEs and
    SEE, not however for CEE
  • Size of spread (meant to capture degree of
    financial liberalization) negative for CEE/SEE,
    but not for EMEs

7
Stage (2) Results (1)
  • Stage (1) equation, suited most for
    extrapolation
  • fixed-effect OLS for small OECD economies (AT,
    AU, BE, CA, DK, FI, GR, IE, NL, NZ, NO, PT, ES,
    SE)
  • Criterion coefficients with theoretically
    predicted sign, significance, robustness
  • Deviations of the observed private credit-to-GDP
    ratio from its long-run equilibrium, in
    percentage points, up to Q1/2008, BALTIC STATES

8
Stage (2) Results (2)
  • Deviations of the observed private credit-to-GDP
    ratio from its long-run equilibrium, in
    percentage points, up to Q1/2008, CENTRAL EUROPE

9
Stage (2) Results (3)
  • Deviations of the observed private credit-to-GDP
    ratio from its long-run equilibrium, in
    percentage points, up to Q1/2008, SOUTH EASTERN
    EUROPE

10
Classifications of Results (1)
  • Type of deviations of the observed private credit
    to GDP ratio from its long-run equilibrium
  • Within the estimated equilibrium range, but more
    tilted towards a deviation at the overshooting
    side Latvia and Bulgaria, indicating credit
    growth possibly beyond the equilibrium (catch-up)
    path
  • Within the estimated equilibrium range, but more
    tilted towards a deviation at the undershooting
    side Estonia, Lithuania, Hungary, Slovenia, and
    Croatia
  • Below but coming very close to the estimated
    equilibrium range Czech Republic, Slovakia, and
    Poland
  • Still below the estimated equilibrium range
    Romania

11
Classifications of Results (2)
  • Overall dynamics of observed private credit
    levels relative to the long-run equilibrium
  • Strong upwards dynamics until 2007 especially in
    the Baltic states and Bulgaria continued until
    Q1/2008 in Hungary, Slovenia, and Romania
  • Indications of a recent trend reversal in Latvia
    and Croatia since Q2/2007 in Estonia, Lithuania,
    Bulgaria, and Slovakia since Q4/2007
  • No major change in observed relative to estimated
    equilibrium credit levels in the Czech Republic
    and Poland in recent times

12
Recent nominal private credit growth rates
13
Recent real private credit growth rates
14
Still comparatively low degree of financial
intermediation, but strong catching-up vis-à-vis
the euro area
15
General Assessment
  • Private sector credit levels lie within or come
    close to their equilibrium ranges in most CESEE
    countries
  • Leverage effect (loosening of credit constraints
    and gained access to finance)
  • Improvement in fundamentals (increasing both
    equilibria and actual credit levels)
  • Future credit growth in CESEE countries will
    (have to) be more moderate and take place in line
    with further improvements in underlying
    fundamentals (catching-up, macro stability,
    financial sector development).
  • The recent slowdown of credit growth in some
    CESEE countries seems to be a sign that credit
    developments are shifting towards a more
    sustainable path.
  • At the current juncture, the policy challenge is
    to ensure that this process takes place in an
    orderly fashion.

16
Appendix I Initial Undershooting Biased
Estimation
17
Appendix II Stage (1) Results
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