Finance and Growth: When Does Credit Really Matter?

Working Paper: CEPR ID: DP6885

Authors: Fabrizio Coricelli; Isabelle Roland

Abstract: The paper provides a simple theory and empirical evidence on the asymmetric effect of credit markets on output decline and output growth. When credit markets are underdeveloped and enterprise activity is financed outside the banking sector, exogenous shocks may induce a break-up of both credit and production chains, leading to sudden and sharp collapses in output. The development of a banking sector can reduce the probability of such collapses. Using industry-level data across a large cross-section of countries, the empirical analysis suggests that credit markets play a more important role in softening output declines than in fostering growth or recovery. These results suggest that credit markets are one of the main suspects for explaining why the magnitude of output declines tends to be larger in emerging markets than in advanced market economies.

Keywords: credit; output; emerging economies; sharp recessions

JEL Codes: E44; O43


Causal Claims Network Graph

Edges that are evidenced by causal inference methods are in orange, and the rest are in light blue.


Causal Claims

CauseEffect
credit markets (G10)output declines (E31)
external finance dependence (O19)output declines (E31)
weak credit institutions (G21)output collapses (E23)
credit market development (O16)output declines (E31)
credit market development (O16)output stability (E23)
credit markets (G10)output stability during downturns (E32)

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