Dr.DEBESH BHOWMIK
Friday, 21 October 2016
Thursday, 20 October 2016
INDO-CHINA TRADE,YUAN IN SDR BASKET AND THE WORLD ECONOMY
INDO-CHINA
TRADE,YUAN IN SDR BASKET AND THE WORLD ECONOMY
ABSTRACT
The
paper studies that India’s export and import intensity are positively related
with GDP growth rate and both are increasing during 1986-2014.Johansen
cointegration test asserted that Trace statistic has 6 cointegrating vectors
and Max Eigen statistics has 3 cointegrating vectors among export intensity, growth
rate, world share of FDI, world share of foreign exchange reserves, US$/yuan
exchange rate.VAR model is stable and variables are related with previous
period. In Johansen cointegration test among import intensity, growth rate, world
FDI share, world foreign exchange reserve share, US$/yuan exchange rate,it was
found that Trace statistic has 3 cointegrating vectors and Max Eigen Statistic
has 2 cointegrating vectors and VAR model is stable. It is verified that one
percent increase in India’s world share in FDI and dollar-Yuan exchange rate
per year led to increase in trade intensity of India to China in export by
0.33% and 1.953% respectively per year significantly during 1986-2014.
Moreover, one percent increase in India’s world share in FDI, Chinese global
share of FDI, dollar yuan rate and India’s global share of foreign exchanges
per year lead to increase in trade intensity of India to China in import by
0.148%, 0.272%,0.912% and 0.622% respectively per year significantly during
1986-2014.
The paper explained that the Chinese Yuan is
included in SDR basket with effect from 1/10/2016 in which the decision was
delayed and its weight in the basket is underestimated having unchanged the
weight of US dollar. It is proposed to reconsider weight of SDR basket by using
world share of international trade as percent of world GDP or by total trade as
percent of world trade. If SDR be considered as international money in the
offing then inclusion of rupee, ruble, rand, Australian dollar, ECOWAS’s common
currency should be reconsidered for wider and equitable importance of SDR
basket.
The paper reviewed the importance and domination of
Indo-China trade in Asia and world in the ancient past but India China relation
has broken after the 1962 war and revived again since 1990s.In recent years’
Indo-China cooperation in trade, commerce, money and finance have been
incorporated in the paper giving emphasis on their strategic role in the world
economy because India China ties can lead to Asian Economic Integration process
and financial integration linkages realizing AMF and in the areas of Indo-USA
defense treaty, Japan-USA defense treaty, Indo-Russian cooperation, Pakistan
China cooperation , Indo-Japan economic cooperation and Indo-ASEAN+3
cooperation respectively.
Key
words-Trade intensity,SDR,growth,VAR,cointegration
JEL-C13,C22,F15,F33,F53
Tuesday, 11 October 2016
NOBEL ECONOMISTS-2016
NOBEL ECONOMISTS-2016
The Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel 2016 was awarded jointly to Oliver Hart and Bengt Holmström "for their contributions to contract theory".Their findings on contract theory have implications in such areas as corporate governance, bankruptcy law and political constitutions, said the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, which announced the 8 million Swedish crown ($928,000) prize.
Oliver Hart, 68, a British economist teaching at Harvard, and Bengt Holmström, 67, a Finnish economist teaching at MIT
"This theory has really been incredibly important, not just for economics, but also for other social sciences," said Per Stromberg, a member of the prize committee and professor at the Stockholm School of Economics.
Contract theory considers, for example, whether managers should get paid bonuses or stock options, or whether teachers or healthcare workers should be paid fixed rates or by performance-based criteria.
Holmstrom, a 67-year-old professor of economics and management at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, said he had been friends with Hart for decades and was thrilled to be sharing the award with him.
Hart, an economics professor at Harvard University, has focused on understanding which companies should merge and with what mix of financing, and when institutions such as schools, prisons and hospitals should be privately or publicly owned.
At Harvard since 1993, Hart has argued that the incentives for cost reductions in privatized services, such as private prisons in the United States, are typically too strong.
Holmstrom has
studied the setting of contracts for workers from teachers to corporate bosses.
He concluded that in high-risk industries, pay should lean toward a fixed
salary, while in more stable sectors pay should be more biased toward
performance rewards.
Asked at a Cambridge, Massachusetts,
news conference about the current high level of executive pay, Holmstrom said,
“It is somehow demand and supply working its magic.”
But he said he was concerned about
the state of income distribution and the unhappiness of many workers about
stagnant wages and incomes.
“I’d much rather live in a society
where this wasn’t happening,” he said. “But I’m not prepared to speak about the
question about how to repair it” because it would mean tinkering with complex
markets.
Most of us sign
contracts. Why do we do so? Take the contracts we enter into with our
employers, for example. There are two main reasons.
First, a contract helps
the two sides of the deal work together over a long period of time. Think of
what would happen if each company would have to search for new employees at the
start of every day, or vice versa.
Second, the contract
creates rules that allow agents with different interests to cooperate to
achieve some goal. No market economy can work without such cooperation premised
on trust but also backed by the law. How contracts are designed defines our
incentives in various situations in the real world.
There are various
nuances in our contracts. They could be formal or informal, depending on
whether they are enforced by law or social norms. They could be complete or
incomplete, which is based on whether they take into account all possibilities
that lay in the future.
One side of a contract
may know more than the other because of information asymmetry, so insurance
companies, for example, may end up covering people with health problems rather
than the healthy, through what is called adverse selection.
There are also agency
problems—as when managers who are under contract with shareholders actually try
to maximize their own earnings rather than those of their shareholders.
Contract theory helps us
understand these problems. And helps us solve them through better contract
design. Take a simple informal contract. A harried mother has to leave the
house for a couple of hours. She is worried her two children will bring the
house down by fighting over a large piece of cake in the refrigerator.
The mother leaves a
simple instruction—the elder child will cut the cake while the younger one will
choose which piece to eat. Now, the elder child cannot cheat. The mother has
aligned their interests—or achieved incentive compatibility—through an informal
contract.
Contract theory is not just about such parlour
games. In two landmark papers written in 1979 and 1991, Holmstrom provided the
principles that can help companies draw up contracts to ensure that managers do
not sacrifice the long-term health of the firm in pursuit of bonuses linked to
short-term performance.
The fact that the 2016 Nobel Prize in economics has gone to two
giants of contract theory tells us something else as well. Most of the public
attention is lavished on macroeconomics and the related dark art of
forecasting. This is where the crisis of economics is the deepest.
Friday, 26 August 2016
UGC Seminar at Shri Shikshayatan College,Kolkata
UGC Seminar at Shri Shikshayatan College,Kolkata
Shri Shikshayatan College,Department commerce organized a
one day UGC sponsored national seminar on “Contemrary Issues in
Finance,Management and Economics” in collaboration with The Institute of Cost
Accountant of India on 26th August,2016,Kolkata.
The seminar was inaugurated by G.K,Khaitan,President of the governing
body.Welcome address was given by the Principal Dr.Aditi Dey.CMA Manas Kumar
Thakur,President,ICAI,and CMA Avijit Goswami,chairman of Research Journal and
IT Committee impressed by their lectures.
In the plenary session-1, Under the Chairmanship of Prof.Dipti Kumar Chakraborty,Department of
Commerce ,University of Calcutta,Dr.Ashish Kumar Bhattacharjee of Indian
Institute of Corporate Affairs,gave his key note address efficiently.Dr.Debaprosanna
Nandy,Director of Research and Journal,ICAI,also gave lectures.In the Plennary
session-2,under the chairmanship of Prof.Dhruba Ranjan
Dandapat of Calcutta University,Prof.Shankarshan Basu of
IIM,Bangalore give his key note address on Indian Capital Market where he emphasized
on corporate India,gold asset,role of investor’s class,exchange,financial
indicators,FDI,growth vs distribution,and basic needs fulfillment.CA,Sumit
Binani-the SBAC and Associates and Director,Value Consultancy Pvt.Ltd.told in
his address on GST,tax structure,CSR and transport.Prof,Kanika Chatterjee of
Calcutta University spoke on “Sustainable Business and Education for a
Regeration Economy:A Post 2015 Global Development Perspective”.In the Technical
Session:Track1A on the theme of Finance And Economics,there are 10 papers from
various colleges in West Bengal.This session is chaired by Dr.Tanupa
Chakraborty,Prof. of Calcutta University.In Track1B on the theme Finance and
Economics there are 6 papers presented so far.I had a paper on “Non Performing
Assets and its relation with advance ,lending rate and GDP in Indian Banking
System”.This session is chaired by Dr.Ram Prahlad Chowdhury,Prof. of Calcutta
University.In Track-2,there were 9 papers presented so far.This session is
chaired by Prof.Rajib Dasgupta,of Calcutta University.
The seminar ends with a grand success with high academic
value.
NON
PERFORMING ASSETS AND ITS RELATION WITH ADVANCE,LENDING RATE AND GDP IN INDIAN
BANKING SECTOR
Dr.Debesh
Bhowmik
Abstract
The paper studied
the trend and behavior of gross NPA of schedule commercial banks,public sector
banks ,new private banks and foreign banks in India during 1996-97-2013-14 and searched
the relationship among gross NPA, gross advance, lending rate and GDP at factor
cost at current prices for all four groups of banks using semilog and double
log regression model, Bai-Perron (2003) structural break test, Johansen
cointegration test and VEC model(1988,1996). The paper concludes that in
schedule commercial bank in India ,gross NPA is increasing at the rate 6.62%
per year during 1996-97-2013-14 in which there is one structural break and is
significantly negatively related with GDP and lending rate and significantly
positively related with gross advance. Those four variables are cointegrated
with two cointegrating equations.Its VEC model is unstable having two
significant error corrections with diverging impulse response functions.
In public sector bank in India, gross NPA is
increasing at the rate 6.06% per year during 1996-97-2013-14 in which there are
four structural breaks and are significantly negatively related with GDP and
lending rate and significantly positively related with gross advance.Those four
variables are cointegrated with two cointegrating equations. Its VEC model is
unstable having two significant error corrections with diverging impulse
response functions.
In new private bank in India, gross NPA is
increasing at the rate 23.48% per year during 1996-97-2013-14 in which there
are four structural breaks and are significantly negatively related with GDP
and insignificantly with lending rate and significantly positively related with
with gross advance.Those four variables are cointegrated with three
cointegrating equations. Its VEC model is unstable having no significant error
corrections with diverging impulse response functions.
In foreign bank in India, gross NPA is increasing at
the rate 9.53% per year during 1996-97-2013-14 in which there are three
structural breaks and are insignificantly negatively related with GDP and
lending rate and significantly positively related with gross advance.Those four
variables are cointegrated with one cointegrating equation. Its VEC model is
unstable having one significant error correction with diverging impulse
response functions.
Key
words- Non performing assets, cointegration, vector error correction,
structural breaks
JEL-C23,E51,G01,G21
Saturday, 30 July 2016
Implications of Negative Interest rate
Assessing the implications of negative interest rates
Speech by Benoît Cœuré, Member of the Executive Board of the ECB, at the Yale Financial Crisis Forum, Yale School of Management, New Haven, 28 July 2016
Introduction[1]
I would like to thank Glenn Schepens and Skander Van den Heuvel for their assistance in preparing this speech. All views expressed herein remain mine.
Interest rates have been low across all major advanced economies for some time now. The decline in interest rates – both nominal and real – has been a persistent trend since the 1990s and is visible in the long-term interest rates on government bonds . A range of structural factors have been proposed for this secular decline in the rate of return on safe assets, including demographic changes, a slowdown in the rate of technological progress, and a high demand for safe assets relative to their supply.[2]
See Bean C., C. Broda, T. Ito and R. Kroszner, “Low for Long? Causes and Consequences of Persistently Low Interest Rates” Geneva Reports on the World Economy 17, 2015.
This decline in long-run interest rates has consequences for monetary policy. Monetary policymakers often think in terms of a concept known as the real equilibrium rate or the “natural” rate of interest.[3]
This equilibrium rate is the interest rate that is consistent with stable inflation and output at its potential level. Setting short-term interest rates above this rate puts downward pressure on activity and inflation. Setting them below this rate of course has the opposite effect. While this real equilibrium interest rate is difficult to estimate precisely, and while there are competing explanations for it, there is a broad consensus that it has declined in advanced economies over the past two decades. By some estimates it is currently negative in the euro area.[4]
Since the global financial crisis, inflation has been low worldwide, and growth subdued. Central bankers are responding to this low inflation and output below potential by conducting accommodative policies. Both these cyclical factors and the longer-term decline in the equilibrium real rate of interest have required policy rates to be set at record low levels in advanced economies. As short-term policy rates approached zero, central banks carried out further loosening by providing forward guidance about the expected future path of interest rates and by lowering term premia through large-scale asset purchase programmes.
In June 2014, following in the footsteps of the Danish National Bank, the European Central Bank (ECB) became the first major central bank to lower one of its key policy rates to negative territory. The rate of interest on our deposit facility is now -0.4% while the rate on our main refinancing operations is zero.[5]
The ECB’s deposit facility rate has become its most important policy rate in an environment of very ample excess liquidity. The overnight money market rate, which was previously driven by the rate on the ECB’s main refinancing operations, is now close to the deposit facility rate.
At the same time, we launched an asset purchase programme (APP) covering a broad range of investment grade securities.These various policy measures are complementary instruments and are necessary to ensure that sufficient stimulus is provided to the economy to return inflation to the ECB’s objective. Failure to take into account the downward trend in real equilibrium interest rates would have resulted in downward pressure on inflation and activity, pushing real interest rates up and driving the economy further away from full employment.
It is difficult to know how long these low interest rates will persist, but it seems possible that they will be low for quite some time. That certainly is the view of financial markets, where the return on government bonds is negative for a range of countries, even at long maturities.
While low or negative rates and the asset purchase programmes are needed to provide sufficient monetary stimulus, a number of observers have voiced concern about their impact on the behaviour of economic agents, on the resilience of financial intermediaries and, ultimately, on financial stability.[6]
Today, I will offer some thoughts on these issues, focusing on the banking sector, which plays a key role in the transmission of monetary policy in the euro area.
The specialness of negative nominal interest rates
So what makes negative rates special? The first answer is cash. Since cash (i.e. paper money and coins) offers a zero nominal return, at some point it will dominate holding assets with negative nominal yields.[7]
For an early discussion from an ECB perspective, see CÅ“uré B., “Central banks and the challenge of the zero lower bound”, intervention at the “Meeting on the Financial Crisis” organised by the University of Chicago Booth School of Business, Miami, 19 February 2012.
For example, if banks were to charge significantly negative rates on deposits, then the higher return on cash could lead households and businesses to withdraw their deposits. And this disintermediation would be likely to pose risks to financial stability.Of course, holding cash is not entirely convenient or costless. It would be cumbersome (not to mention risky) to buy a car or a house in cash, and storing a large amount of cash requires high-security storage as well as insurance. These costs of holding and insuring cash explain why the effective lower bound on interest rates is below zero.[8]
The literature on substitution between cash and deposits at the lower bound, and on technical devices which can push the “physical” lower bound down, starts with the proposal by Gesell (1911) to attach stamps to banknotes to accelerate their demurrage. It was revived by Goodfriend (2000) and Buiter and Panigirtzoglou (2001) and more recently by Agarwal and Kimball (2015).
The academic discussion of negative rates has centred around cash, but in public debate other issues have recently emerged.One issue is associated with money illusion, i.e. the tendency of people to value assets and goods in nominal rather than in real terms.[9]This led to the notion that negative nominal rates are unnatural, which has become a popular theme in the public debate.[10]
“Imagine a world in which tax offices harry people who file their returns promptly; where big supermarket chains pay their suppliers before the goods fly off the shelves and not months afterwards; and where a pre-paid annual gym membership is more costly than paying month by month. It sounds fanciful, absurd even.”, in The Economist, op. cit.
In contrast, we have been through episodes of negative real rates in the past without having such debates. Indeed, as the Bundesbank has noted, negative real rates of interest on deposits have been the norm rather than the exception in Germany in recent decades.[11]
People may gradually understand the rationale behind negative nominal rates and adapt to this new situation. For instance, the popular assumption that the negative income effect on household consumption dominates the positive substitution effect when nominal yields are very low is not in line with the evidence. In fact, the average net interest income of euro area households has been largely unaffected, thanks to lower interest payments. Low interest rates have mainly redistributed resources from net savers to net borrowers. As the latter typically have a higher marginal propensity to consume than the former, this has further supported consumption.[12]
But one cannot rule out that negative nominal interest rates raise broader cognitive issues as they challenge the rules of thumb used by economic agents in their everyday decisions.
Finally, negative rates may be special due to institutional features embedded in the financial system, such as legal restrictions on the application of negative rates or at least uncertainty regarding the legal standing of such an arrangement,[13]
For example, some financial contracts (e.g. money market funds or floating rate notes) may not foresee the possibility of payments from the lender to the borrower and in any case the logistics of collecting interest payments from holders of securities can be complex.
or the tax treatment of negative interest rate income, which is often not symmetric with the treatment of positive interest rate income. In addition, some IT systems may not be able to cope with negative rates. In the euro area, however, these scenarios have not yet materialised. Thanks to intensive technical cooperation between the ECB and market participants ahead of the introduction of negative rates, our experience has been very smooth, allowing large parts of the government bond and secured and unsecured money markets to operate at negative rates without any disruption.[14]
The introduction of negative rates has been smooth also in other jurisdictions outside of the euro area.[15]
How low and for how long?
There are two key questions for central bankers . First, how much lower can we go? Second, does the persistence of low and/or negative interest rates pose particular challenges to the stability of the financial system? Answering the first question appears to be simple. As I said earlier, the “physical lower bound” of nominal interest rates, at which disintermediation risk will materialise, is imposed by the opportunity cost of holding cash.
But is there an “economic lower bound”, different from the physical one, where further rate cuts cease to provide aggregate stimulus to the economy? This economic lower bound could then potentially but not necessarily impose an earlier binding constraint for monetary policy.
Indeed, in the current discussion, it has been suggested that at some point the level of rates can become low to the extent that the detrimental effects on the banking sector outweigh the benefits of lower rates. In a recent paper, Brunnermeier and Koby refer to this rate as the “reversal rate”.[16]
At the reversal rate, bank profitability will fall, reducing capital generation via retained earnings, which is an important source of capital accumulation, and thereby eventually restricting lending. The risk that low rates might cause short-term dislocation in financial markets was already identified by Bernanke and Reinhart in their 2004 paper on the implications of very low rates.[17]
Low (and negative rates) have both a one-off short-term impact and more persistent effects on a bank’s profitability and capital. And bank capital matters for credit provision and for financial stability, as low bank capital means high leverage.
The short-term impact partly stems from one-off capital gains on the outstanding fixed-income portfolio of a bank. When rates are falling, the value of fixed-income securities on a bank’s balance sheet goes up, leading to higher profits. A decline in the level of interest rates can also boost net interest margins in the short run. Banks carry out maturity transformation by borrowing short term and lending long term. As short-term interest rates fall, funds become cheaper. Since existing fixed-rate loans take some time to reprice to lower rates, the initial impact of lower rates on net interest margins could be positive. Other things being equal, lower rates will decrease net interest income over the long term. If the decline in rates is accompanied by a flattening of the yield curve, the margin between lending and borrowing eventually compresses, reducing net interest income. Such a flattening may result from expectations of a prolonged period of low short-term rates, and it may be compounded by a compression of the term premium if the central bank also operates a large-scale asset purchase programme.
Even for a given slope of the yield curve, a low level of interest rates can also compress net interest margins for banks reliant on retail deposits. The reason is that retail deposits tend to have low and sticky interest rates, and banks are reluctant to charge negative rates on them. As market rates decline, the yield on bank assets will eventually drop, but this funding source will still cost the same to banks, resulting in a decline in net interest margins. The decline in present and future net interest margin reduces the forward-looking measure of bank capital, hence the risk-bearing capacity of the bank, and its supply of credit. This is turning upside down Adrian and Shin’s “credit supply channel” of transmission of monetary policy.[18]
See Adrian, T., and H.S. Shin (2011), “Financial Intermediaries and Monetary Economics”, in B. Friedman and M. Woodford (Eds.), Handbook of Monetary Economics, Volume 3, Chapter 12, pp. 601-650.
The exact magnitude of the effect of negative interest rates on aggregate bank profitability is uncertain, since it has to be put in the context of what would happen in the absence of monetary policy action. First of all, servicing floating-rate loans and mortgages becomes more affordable as interest rates fall. Borrowers who are struggling in the adverse economic climate are therefore less likely to default. Second, and more importantly, accommodative monetary policy should create a more favourable macroeconomic environment, which ought to improve the financial situation of bank borrowers. Indeed, empirical research shows a clear negative relation between economic growth rates and non-performing loans.[19]
These positive effects are present at all rate levels and are likely to dominate when rates are moderately negative.
Also, the economic lower bound is not uniquely determined at the aggregate level, since it will vary across banks and markets. The larger the share of floating-rate lending in the stock of loans, the faster the negative impact on interest margins will be. Banks with large fixed-income holdings and holdings of bonds which benefited the most from spread compression will be better able to offset decreases in interest margins, due to the revaluation effect I mentioned earlier. The reversal rate is also likely to be lower for those banks that are more reliant on wholesale rather than retail funding. Market-based funding suffers less from this zero lower bound, meaning that these banks will be better able to protect their interest margin. Similarly, banks with greater market power will be better able to avoid passing on the lower rates to borrowers, which will shield their interest margin.
In the euro area, this translates into geographic differences based on national banking structures, implying that the negative interest rate policy has distributional consequences across banks located in different jurisdictions.
The second important question for central bankers is whether the persistence of low and/or negative interest rates poses other challenges to the stability of the financial system.
Challenges to financial stability could potentially materialise if banks were to increase their exposure to lower quality counterparties in order to boost returns.[20]
This could reflect a portfolio rebalancing towards riskier assets when yields on safe assets are low, or a greater concentration of lending to small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs), which generate higher returns but have historically exhibited higher default risk.
The effect is similar to the “search for yield” by managers targeting a minimum return on assets.[21]
Note that this mechanism may as well apply to shadow banks insofar as they rely on short-term funding. Financial stability risks could also materialise outside of banks, through excessively inflated financial asset prices and if zero or negative rates encourage asset price volatility.
Existing empirical evidence, mainly relying on periods with low, but positive rates before the global financial crisis, indicates that periods of lower interest rates are indeed associated with lower bank lending standards and with a shift of credit towards borrowers with a lower credit quality.[22]
Additionally, the latest ECB Survey on the Access to Finance of Enterprises in the Euro Area (SAFE) shows an improvement in the availability of bank loans for SMEs between October 2014 (shortly after negative rates were introduced) and March 2016.[23]
This could indicate that one way that banks are taking on more risk is by lending more to smaller, and typically riskier, firms.Of course, promoting lending, including to risky borrowers, is one of the goals of accommodative monetary policy.
But the main question, however, is whether negative rates can also lead to excessive risk-taking by banks. If accommodative monetary policy works as intended, then more investment projects will gain a positive net present value and will be financed – including some riskier ones. That’s the “good” risk-taking. However, banks may be tempted to finance risky but negative net present value loans – that is excessive or “bad” risk-taking. The theory suggests that this possibility is more likely when interest rates are low, if banks are highly leveraged or if they can easily adjust their capital structure.[24]Empirical evidence
While theoretically appealing, a precise estimate of the point where accommodative monetary policy becomes contractionary and/or an issue for financial stability is extremely challenging.What I can offer you today is an overview of the situation of financial intermediaries in the euro area, in order to see whether there are signs that we have reached or are reaching a reversal rate.
But let me start by referring to the most recent data on monetary developments in the euro area. They show no signs of cash substitution, indicating that we are still far from the physical lower bound for nominal interest rates.[25]
The annual growth rate of the narrower aggregate, including currency in circulation and overnight deposits (M1), decreased to 8.6% in June, from 9.1% in May. See ECB, “Monetary developments in the euro area: June 2016,” https://www.ecb.europa.eu/press/pdf/md/md1606.pdf.
In a second step, let me focus on bank income and profitability. Slide 8 shows the main sources of operating income for banks in the euro area, based on aggregate numbers. [ Slide 8: Euro-area banks: Income sources ] In recent years, the distribution of these sources has been fairly stable, with approximately 60% of income coming from net interest income, 25% from fees and commissions and 15% from other income sources.
Given its large share, net interest income thus plays an important role in bank profitability. As I mentioned, a reduction in interest rates could harm interest margins, and this could be even more pronounced when rates enter negative territory, due to a potential zero lower bound for retail deposit rates.
Slide 9 illustrates average loan and deposit rates for both non-financial corporations and households in the euro area.[26]
See English W., J. Skander Van den Heuvel, and E. Zakrajsek, “Interest Rate Risk and Bank Equity Valuations”, Finance and Economics Discussion Series 2012-26, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, for evidence on the reaction of net interest margins of US banks to changes in rates.
The vertical red line indicates June 2014, the first time deposit facility rates became negative in the euro area. The gap between loan rates and deposit rates narrows because declining rates are passed on more strongly to loan rates than to deposit rates, indicating that there indeed seems to be a zero lower bound for deposits. While average deposit rates only decreased by around 0.2 percentage point between June 2014 and May 2016, loan rates decreased by around 0.8 percentage point, effectively reducing the interest margin. This is also shown on slide 10, using profit and loss data of a group of large euro area banks, which on average indeed have seen a reduction of their net interest margins – defined here as net interest income over total assets – since mid-2014.But what about overall income? ECB staff estimates show that the overall impact on bank profitability of recent monetary policy actions is net positive, compared with a scenario without any monetary policy action[27]
See Rostagno M. et al., “Breaking through the zero line: The ECB’s Negative Interest Rate Policy”, Brookings Institution, Washington DC, 6 June 2016. Presentation available on the Brookings website.
. Decreasing net interest income and charges on excess liquidity do put pressure on bank profitability. But there are also two strong positive effects of lower rates. First, the positive impact of lower rates on the macro environment reduces firm default risk and lowers the debt servicing cost of borrowers, which should improve credit quality. Second, lower rates will lead to capital gains on the bond portfolio of banks. The ECB’s latest Financial Stability Review[28]broadly confirms these model-based estimates. As slide 12 shows, the net income of euro area significant banking groups actually increased between 2014 and 2015. This was mainly driven by lower impairments and higher non-interest income. Even net interest income made a positive contribution, despite a small decline in interest margins. This reflects an increase in volumes, which is of course an intended consequence of accommodative monetary policy. As discussed earlier, however, interest margins are likely to stay low and might even further decline, while profits from one-off capital gains will fade away. Indeed, analysts forecast a decline in bank profitability in 2016 and 2017, mainly due to lower net interest income. And the recent decline in euro area bank share prices can be at least partially ascribed to market concerns over future banks profitability.
As such, if very low or negative rates are here for a prolonged period of time due to the structural drivers highlighted above, banks might have to rethink their business models. The revenue structure of euro area banks was stable for a long time but it has recently begun to change and there is at least some evidence of banks tending to offer fee-based products to clients as substitutes for interest-based products.[29]
Another way forward is to improve cost efficiency. Although a number of banks have reduced their operating costs over the last couple of years, overall cost efficiency has remained low in the euro area, with aggregate cost-income ratios between 63% and 65% over the last five years.[30]
Consolidated ECB banking data for domestic banks in the euro area.
Action taken by euro-area banks to remedy this situation will also help them cope with a prolonged period of very low rates. Action to dispose of their stocks of legacy non-performing loans, which has been identified by ECB Banking Supervision as one of its priorities for 2016, will also safeguard their profitability.Moving away from profitability, deposit growth rates for euro area banks show that there is no sign of disintermediation risk at the moment. Deposits of both households and non-financial corporations have been growing over the past two years, at a similar pace to the period before we entered negative interest rate territory . This risk is not materialising mainly because rates on retail deposit seem to have a zero lower bound, as shown earlier.
With regard to bank lending, it is clear that we have not yet reached the reversal rate for the euro area. Bank lending has improved since mid-2014, both for non-financial corporations and households. Similarly, results from the ECB’s July 2016 euro area bank lending survey clearly indicate that loan supply conditions for enterprises in the area are continuing to improve.
Finally, what about the risks to financial stability? The ongoing economic recovery should help bolster the income and earnings position of euro area households and non-financial corporations, thereby mitigating the risks associated with a continued debt overhang which persists in some countries. At the same time, the recovery of euro area real estate markets has gained further momentum. While overall residential property valuations remain contained, prime commercial property valuations have moved above long-term averages. Against this backdrop, as highlighted in the ECB’s latest Financial Stability Review, the best way to counter any potentially emerging risk in any market segment is targeted action by the macroprudential authorities.
Conclusions
Let me conclude. As is well known from the academic literature, the “physical lower bound” of short-term nominal interest rates is equal to the opportunity costs of holding cash. Monetary developments in the euro area show no signs of cash substitution, indicating that we are still far away from the physical lower bound. Central bankers should however be mindful of a potential “economic lower bound”, at which the detrimental effects of low rates on the banking sector outweigh their benefits, and further rate cuts risk reversing the expansionary monetary policy stance.The ECB is mindful of these risks. In the euro area, the potential adverse impact on bank profitability, if it materialises, would be compounded by low growth prospects and a legacy of high non-performing loans.[31]
See Constâncio V., “Challenges for the European banking industry”, lecture at the conference on “European Banking Industry: what’s next?”, University of Navarra, Madrid, 7 July 2016.
The current conditions of financial intermediation suggest, however, that the economic lower bound is safely below the current level of the deposit facility rate and that the impact of negative rates, combined with the APP and forward guidance, has clearly been net positive. Indeed, we should not look at the implications of negative interest rates in isolation. Negative nominal rates have reinforced forward guidance in the euro area, sped up the process of portfolio rebalancing associated with the APP and supported the effectiveness of the recent targeted longer-term refinancing operations.But there can be cumulative effects on financial intermediation and financial stability if rates remain very low for a very long time. One might argue that disintermediation may have benign effects if non-bank entities are equally capable of collecting and channelling savings, while being less vulnerable to the adverse effects of negative interest rates. The shift towards a more market-based financial structure, as promoted by the European Union’s capital markets union project, would then help our economy cope with a longer period of very low or negative rates. But there is a limit to this argument. Non-banks are also affected by very low rates: for example, fixed net asset value money market funds may not be able to maintain the value of their shares close to par, while asset managers and insurance companies face the same shrinking margins as banks. Regardless of the entities that originate and distribute, household savings will be collected and long-term assets will sit on a balance sheet.
So what can be done to address this situation? The ECB’s monetary policy measures, including the deposit facility rate set at its current negative level, are proving to be effective in lifting inflation towards its medium-term objective and reducing the overall level of risk in the economy. Fiscal and structural policies should act more decisively to support aggregate demand and productivity, thereby preventing the economy from falling into a low interest rate trap. And banks should adapt continually to the changing environment by adjusting their business models, cutting their operating costs and reducing their non-performing loans. In doing so, they will also improve their resilience to a prolonged period of very low rates.
[1]I would like to thank Glenn Schepens and Skander Van den Heuvel for their assistance in preparing this speech. All views expressed herein remain mine.
[2]See Bean C., C. Broda, T. Ito and R. Kroszner, “Low for Long? Causes and Consequences of Persistently Low Interest Rates” Geneva Reports on the World Economy 17, 2015.
[3]See CÅ“uré B., “The economic consequences of low interest rates”, lecture at the International Center for Monetary and Banking Studies, Geneva, 9 October 2013. The natural starting point for an economist is K. Wicksell, Interest and Prices, Royal Economic Society, 1936. For a definition of the natural rate of interest in the context of dynamic economic models, see Woodford M., Interest and Prices: Foundations of a Theory of Monetary Policy, Princeton University Press, 2003.
[4]See Laubach T. and J. Williams, “Measuring the Natural Rate of Interest Redux”, Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco, Working Paper, No. 2015-16, October 2015, and V. Constâncio, “The challenge of low interest rates for monetary policy”, lecture at the Macroeconomics Symposium, Utrecht School of Economics, 15 June 2016.
[5]The ECB’s deposit facility rate has become its most important policy rate in an environment of very ample excess liquidity. The overnight money market rate, which was previously driven by the rate on the ECB’s main refinancing operations, is now close to the deposit facility rate.
[6]See, for example, The Economist, “Negative creep”, 6 February 2016.
[7]For an early discussion from an ECB perspective, see CÅ“uré B., “Central banks and the challenge of the zero lower bound”, intervention at the “Meeting on the Financial Crisis” organised by the University of Chicago Booth School of Business, Miami, 19 February 2012.
[8]The literature on substitution between cash and deposits at the lower bound, and on technical devices which can push the “physical” lower bound down, starts with the proposal by Gesell (1911) to attach stamps to banknotes to accelerate their demurrage. It was revived by Goodfriend (2000) and Buiter and Panigirtzoglou (2001) and more recently by Agarwal and Kimball (2015). See Gesell S., Die Natürliche Wirtschaftsordnung, 1911, published by Rudolf Zitzman Verlag, 1949; Fisher, I. “Stamp scrip”, Adelphi Company, 1933; Buiter W. and N. Panigirtzoglou, “Liquidity traps: How to avoid them and how to escape them,” in W. Vanthoor and J. Mooij (Eds.), Reflections on Economics and Econometrics, Essays in Honour of Martin Fase, De Nederlandsche Bank, 2001, pp. 13–58; Goodfriend M., “Overcoming the Zero Bound on Interest Rate Policy”, Journal of Money, Credit and Banking, Vol. 32, No. 4, pp. 1007-1035, 2000; and R. Agarwal and M. Kimball, “Breaking Through the Zero Lower Bound,” IMF Working Paper, No. 15/224, 2015.
[9]On money illusion, see Shafir E., P. Diamond and A. Tversky, “Money Illusion”, The Quarterly Journal of Economics, Vol. 112, Issue 2, 1997, pp. 341-374. On the interaction between negative rates and money illusion, see Borio C. and A. Zabai, 2016 “Unconventional monetary policies: a re-appraisal”, BIS Working Paper No 570, 2016.
[10]“Imagine a world in which tax offices harry people who file their returns promptly; where big supermarket chains pay their suppliers before the goods fly off the shelves and not months afterwards; and where a pre-paid annual gym membership is more costly than paying month by month. It sounds fanciful, absurd even.”, in The Economist, op. cit.
[11]See Deutsche Bundesbank, “Nothing new about real interest rates on deposits”, 30 June 2014, https://www.bundesbank.de/Redaktion/EN/Topics/2014/2014_06_30_nothing_new_negative_interest_rates.html.
[12]See European Central Bank, “Low interest rates and households net interest income”, ECB Economic Bulletin, Issue 4 / 2016, Box 3.
[13]See McAndrews J., “Negative Nominal Central Bank Policy Rates: Where Is the Lower Bound?”, remarks at the University of Wisconsin, 8 May 2015. For example, some financial contracts (e.g. money market funds or floating rate notes) may not foresee the possibility of payments from the lender to the borrower and in any case the logistics of collecting interest payments from holders of securities can be complex.
[14]See CÅ“uré B., “Life below zero: learning about negative interest rates”, presentation at the annual dinner of the ECB’s Money Market Contact Group, 9 September 2014.
[15]Jackson, H. "The international experience with negative policy rates", Bank of Canada Staff Discussion Paper, No. 2015-13, November 2015.
[16]See Brunnermeier M. and Y. Koby, “The “Reversal Rate”: Effective Lower Bound on Monetary Policy”, presented at the BIS research network meeting, 14 March 2016. See https://www.bis.org/events/confresearchnetwork1603/brunnermeier.pdf
[17]See Bernanke B. and V. Reinhart, “Conducting Monetary policy at Very Low Short-Term Interest Rates”, American Economic Association Papers and Proceedings, Vol. 94, No. 2, pp. 85, May 2004.
[18]See Adrian, T., and H.S. Shin (2011), “Financial Intermediaries and Monetary Economics”, in B. Friedman and M. Woodford (Eds.), Handbook of Monetary Economics, Volume 3, Chapter 12, pp. 601-650.
[19]See Beck, R., P. Jakubik and A. Piloiu, “Non-performing loans: What matters in addition to the economic cycle?” ECB Working Paper, No. 1515, February 2013
[20]See Borio, C. and H. Zhu, “Capital regulation, risk-taking and monetary policy: a missing link in the transmission mechanism?”, Journal of Financial Stability, Vol. 8, 2012, pp. 238-251, and Caballero R., Hoshi T. and A. Kashyap, “Zombie Lending and Depressed Restructuring in Japan,” American Economic Review, Vol. 98, 2008, pp. 1943–77.
[21]See Rajan R., “Has financial development made the world riskier?”, European Financial Management, 12(4), 2006, pp. 499–533.
[22]See, for example, Ioannidou V., S. Ongena, and J.-L. Peydrò, “Monetary policy and subprime lending: a tall tale of low federal funds rates, hazardous loans and reduced loan spreads”, European Banking Centre Discussion Paper, No. 45, 2009; Maddaloni A. and J.-L. Peydrò, “Bank Risk-Taking, Securitization, Supervision and Low Interest Rates: Evidence from the Euro Area and U.S. Lending Standards”, Review of Financial Studies, Vol. 24, No. 6, pp. 2121-165, 2011; Jiménez G., S. Ongena, J.-L. Peydrò and J. Saurina, “Hazardous Times for Monetary Policy: What Do Twenty-Three Million Bank Loans Say About the Effects of Monetary Policy on Credit Risk-Taking?”, Econometrica, Vol. 82, No. 2, pp. 463-505, 2014; and Dell'Ariccia G., L. Laeven, and G. Suarez, “Bank Leverage and Monetary Policy’s Risk-Taking Channel: Evidence from the United States”, Journal of Finance, forthcoming.
[23]See the October 2014 – March 2015, April 2015 – September 2015 and October 2015 – March 2016 SAFE surveys.
[24]See Dell’Ariccia G., L. Laeven, R. Marquez, “Real interest rates, leverage, and bank risk-taking,” Journal of Economic Theory, 149, 2014.
[25]The annual growth rate of the narrower aggregate, including currency in circulation and overnight deposits (M1), decreased to 8.6% in June, from 9.1% in May. See ECB, “Monetary developments in the euro area: June 2016,” https://www.ecb.europa.eu/press/pdf/md/md1606.pdf.
[26]See English W., J. Skander Van den Heuvel, and E. Zakrajsek, “Interest Rate Risk and Bank Equity Valuations”, Finance and Economics Discussion Series 2012-26, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, for evidence on the reaction of net interest margins of US banks to changes in rates.
[27]See Rostagno M. et al., “Breaking through the zero line: The ECB’s Negative Interest Rate Policy”, Brookings Institution, Washington DC, 6 June 2016. Presentation available on the Brookings website.
[28]See the May 2016 ECB Financial Stability Review, p. 60, Chart 3.4.
[29]See Nouy D., “Risks and resilience – the European banking sector in 2016”, speech at the Bank Capital Forum, London, 23 February 2016.
[30]Consolidated ECB banking data for domestic banks in the euro area.
[31]See Constâncio V., “Challenges for the European banking industry”, lecture at the conference on “European Banking Industry: what’s next?”, University of Navarra, Madrid, 7 July 2016.
Monday, 25 July 2016
Global female unemployment:An econometric study
This journal is the outcome of 15-16 July conference in Vijaywada by IMRF in which 55 research papers were presented and published relating to mainly gender studies that were contributed by several social scientists.
I have a paper in it entitled "Global female unemployment:An econometric study"
Here is an Abstract
Global Female Unemployment: An
Econometric Study
Dr.Debesh Bhowmik (Ex.Principal and
Associate Editor-Arthabeekshan)
Abstract
The paper studied that
world unemployment has been increasing at the rate of 1.335% per year during
1991-2018 in which male and female unemployment have been stipulating at the
rates of 1.28% and 1.42% per year respectively during the same period.All are
significant.The global female unemployment has been significantly increasing
exponentially at the rate of 0.0158% per year in the study period.AR(2) process
of the global female unemployment is nonstationary and significant.On the other
hand ARIMA(1,1,1) model of the global female unemployment is also
nonstationary.It follows random walk hypothesis and also satisfied the random
walk with a drift conditions.This series showed a good fit of minimizing cycles
under the Hodrick-Prescott-Filter model.
In showing the nexus
between global growth rate and global female unemployment,the paper concludes
that it follows the Okun’s law and one percent increase in global growth rate
per year led to 0.00562% decrease in global female unemployment per year during
1991-2018 which is statistically insignificant.The nexus between the two showed
bi-directional causality and cointegration in the order of one cointegrating
vector.The VAR model is not quite good fit but showed stable and divergent as
had been confirmed by unit root circle and impulse response functions
respectively.
Key
words- Global female unemployment, world unemployment, world growth, cointegration,
causality, VAR
JEL-
J01, C68
Female labor
force participation rates vary among countries and vary with time, and it is
widely believed and witnessed that female labor force participation rates are
relatively high in developed countries. That rapid change of female labor force
participation rates in developing and developed countries has contributed
economists to pursuit of analyzing the evolution of female labor force
participation in cross-countries. U-shaped hypothesis, simply, exhibits the
relationship between economic development and female labor force participation
and it is suggested that female labor force participation rates first decline,
and then rise as the country develops. Apart from that, it is suggested that,
other conditions, such as labor market conditions and household characteristics
also affect the female labor force participation. Among these, educational attainment,
unemployment rate, urbanization rate and industrial mix are the remarkable determinants
of female labor force participation. During the process of development,
especially, at the initial stages of economic development, home-based
production pattern changes to market oriented production pattern. Market
oriented activities dominate home-based production, henceforth, the expansion
of market oriented activities or introduction of new technologies lead to a
decrease in female labor force participation. After a certain point, economic
development requires more female labor, and demand for female workers will
increase. Hence, female labor force
participation will increase. Almost all of the studies about female labor force
participation exhibit the existence of U-shaped female in the cross-country
analyses. It is suggested that less developed countries have high level of
female labor force participation rates. Since agricultural activities play
important role, women in these countries employed as unpaid family workers,
therefore female labor force participation is relatively high in less-developed
countries. On the other hand, developing countries have the lowest female labor
force participation rates. In an extreme example, developed countries have the
highest female labor force participation rate. According to econometric
results, all unemployment variables have negative effects on female labor force
participation, but female
unemployment
rate has, roughly, more impact than others. These results are in accordance
with
“discouraged-worker
effect” hypothesis, theoretically, when the unemployment rates are
relatively high,
it will be more difficult for females to enter labor market, and probability of
not
being employed
increases. The effects of urbanization rate and total fertility rate are found
to be as expected in all models; both variables have hinder female labor force
participation. It should not be missed out that total fertility rate has more
impact on female labor force participation rates than urban population rate;
that is, when fertility rate is high, females devote themselves as a
responsible for household activities. Population employed in agriculture and
population employed in industry are other determinants of female labor force
participation and they have positive and negative coefficient respectively.
This paper has
endeavoured to analyse the global female unemployment patterns and its nexus
with global growth rate during 1991-2018.
....................Please read from the Journal page 52-60.
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