Séminaire

Deposit Volatility, Liquidity and Long-Term Investment: Evidence from a Natural Experiment in Pakistan

Nicola Limodio (LSE)

23 janvier 2017, 14h00–15h30

Toulouse

Salle MS001

Job Market Seminar

Résumé

Deposit volatility lowers loan maturities in the presence of costly bank liquidity, which in turn reduces long-term investment and output. We formalise this mechanism in a banking model and analyse exogenous variation in deposit volatility induced by a Sharia levy in Pakistan. Data from the universe of corporate loans and a firm-level survey show that deposit volatility and liquidity cost: 1) reduce loan maturities and lending rates; 2) leave loan amounts and total investment unchanged; 3) redirect investment from fixed assets towards working capital. A targeted liquidity program is quantified to generate yearly output gains between 0.042% and 0.205%.