Credit Spread Variability in the U.S. Business Cycle: The Great Moderation versus the Great Recession

Journal of Banking and Finance

This paper identifies the prevailing financial factors that influence credit spread variability and shows how they affected the U.S. business cycle during the 1990–91 and 2001 recessions of the Great Moderation period (1984–2006) and the Great Recession of 2007–09. To do this, we develop and estimate a dynamic general equilibrium model in which financial intermediation and equity assets play a central role. Over the three recession periods, we find that bank market power (sticky rate adjustments and loan rate markups) played a significant role in the credit spread variability that disrupted the U.S. business cycle. Equity prices exacerbate movements in credit spreads through the financial accelerator channel, but cannot be regarded as one of the main driving forces of credit spread variability. Across the three periods, we observe a remarkable decline in the influence of technology and monetary policy shocks. The influence of loan-to-value ratio shocks declined after the 1990–91 recession, while the bank capital requirement shock exacerbated and prolonged credit spread variability over the 2007–09 recession.

SHARE THIS Research Paper PUBLICATION:
Related Project Content
SAMNet
Event
Call for Work
Request for Proposals: The role of cities as drivers of growth and employment
publication
Discussion Document
publication
Discussion Document
Monitoring South Africa’s metropolitan economies: A survey of the data landscape
publication
Discussion Document
Cities, productivity and Jobs in SA: Problems and potential
publication
Discussion Document
Place-based economic policies: international lessons for South Africa
publication
Discussion Document
What luminosity data can and cannot reveal about South Africa’s urban economies
publication
Discussion Document
Crime: A policy-oriented survey
Event
Workshop
Virtual CDE Workshop on SA Cities and Growth
Video
SAMNet 2021: Introduction - Fiscal Policy and Fiscal-Monetary Interdependence in South ...
Video
Session 3: Hylton Hollander - Government debt and interest rates
Video
Session 4: Roy Havemann - Fiscal policy in times of fiscal stress
Video
Session 5: Olivier Hubert - Macroeconomic Interactions & the Cost of Fiscal Stimulu...
Video
Session 6: Duduzile Ndlovu - Monetary and fiscal policy coordination in the SACU area
Video
Session 7: Serena Merrino - State-dependent fiscal multipliers & financial dynamics...
Video
Session 8: Tumisang Loate - A macroeconomic effect of fiscal policy in SA: A narrative ...
Video
Session 9: Cobus Vermeulen - Monetary financing of fiscal expenditure in South Africa
Video
Session 10: Luchelle Soobyah - Macroeconomic effect of government debt maturity structure
Video
Session 1: Financial Openness and External Adjustment in Emerging and Frontier Market E...
Video
Session 2: Foreign Exchange Imbalances: A Markov-Switching Approach for South Africa
Video
Session 3: Apple Product Prices, the Law of One Price and Real Exchange Rate Dynamics
Video
Session 4: A Fundamental Connection: Exchange Rates and Macroeconomic Expectation
Video
Session 5: Firm Level Expectations and Macroeconomic Conditions – Underpinning and Disa...
Video
Session 6: Measuring Market Expectations
Video
Session 7: Excess financial elasticity: The asymmetric effects of heterogeneous capital...
Video
Session 8: Hopeless Hysteresis: Investigating Unemployment Persistence in South Africa
Video
Introducing SAMNet: the Sharing Functionality
Video
Session 2: Eric M. Leeper - Applying Monetary-Fiscal Policy Interactions: Part II
Video
Session 1: Eric M. Leeper - Understanding Monetary-Fiscal Policy Interactions: Part I
Video
Session 12: New data, new methods & new models around FX interventions
Video
Session 11: Advances in nowcasting activity: Secular trends, large shocks, new data
Video
Introducing South African Modelling Network (SAMNet)
Video
Session 10: Economic stability in a small open economy under international financiers-C...
Video
Session 9: Modelling Fiscal - Monetary Policy interactions - Hylton Hollander
Video
Session 8: How firms and experts view the Phillips curve - Monique Reid & Pierre Si...
Video
Session 7: Theory & application of shocks emanating from endogenous or exogenous or...
Video
Session 6: Financial openness external adjustment in emerging market economies - Bernar...
Video
Session 5: Effects of economic complexity on economic performance - Thobeka Ncanywa
Video
Session 4: A forward guidance indicator for the SARB: text analysis algorithms - Hylton...
Video
Session 3: Narrative in Monetary Policy - Charl van Schoor
Video
Session 2: The new geography of capital - Matteo Maggiori
Video
Session 1: Bank of Chile Micro-data Strategy by Elias Albagli
Event
Call for SAMNet Papers
Call for Papers: New Data, New Methods, New Models for Monetary Policy
Event
SAMNet Workshop
South African Macroeconomic Network Virtual Workshop: New Data, New Methods, New Models...
Event
SAMNet Workshop
New Data, New Methods, New Models for Monetary Policy
Contribute to The SAMNet Code Sharing Project
The SAMNet code sharing project is a repository of macroeconomic models focusing primarily on the South African economy. By making these codes available to the masses, this project intends to make the replication of prominent works more feasible while at the same time facilitating and encouraging the comparison of models. An additional goal of the SAMNet sharing initiative is promoting discussions among researchers, which is made simple on our forum.

For more information, contact Vincent Dadam or fill the form below with your details and code docs.

"*" indicates required fields

Name*
Accepted file types: pdf, Max. file size: 512 MB.