Transcript
Page 1: Contributing  to the pre-crisis  growth

ECRI ConferenceLending to Households

after the crisisHow should the lessons from the past

be reflected in regulation16th May 2013

Brussels

Page 2: Contributing  to the pre-crisis  growth

Contributing to the pre-crisis growth

• Household debt an important part of the growth story• Liquidity constraints of households decreased

• Increase in homeownership contributed to stability of income

• The economic multiplier of credit boosted economy

• Life-cycle hypothesis• If economy grows, the future income expectations are high

• If expectations high, higher value over the rest of the life cycle

• If interest rates low, increasing the discount rate on the future

• Therefore it is seemingly more sustainable to take on more credit in the short term

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The run-up

• As a result, relatively high leveraged households• Not a problem if economy keeps growing, but…

• Highly leveraged households are more sensitive to…• Future income-expectations changes• Change in interest rates

• A financial shock or a crisis• causes future expectations to drop quickly• Debt service increases as a ratio of income• Both lead to lower borrowing, lower spending and lower

aggregate demand than in less leveraged households, deepening the crisis

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1. Household-debt development on EU and

member-state level

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No clear pattern on EU aggregate level

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A range of different developments in EU member states

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European “Core” – overall household debt levels in real values

Stable or rising debt levels throughout the crisis

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European “Periphery” – Overall household debt levels in real values

Crisis having large effect on the household-debt growth rates

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1. Household-debt development on EU and member-state level

• EU aggregate data not telling any story• Necessary to go on member-state level• What was driving such vast diversity?

• Financial market integration and innovation

• Limited policy encouragement of home-ownership

• All leading to higher supply everywhere, but…

• The cost of credit• Extremely different real interest rates (APR) across the EU

• Significant correlation with debt expansion

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2. The cost of credit

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Real APR across the EU – a diverse picture

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2. The cost of credit

• Relative stability of real interest rates in the core• A more varied cycle in the case of periphery• Great volatility in the new member states• Sometimes persistently low interest rates during high-

inflation periods, inflating the debt• In CEE countries pegged to the euro the most radical

development during the crisis• Consumer credit spreads increasing

• Reflecting the rise in risk of income losses (no collateral)

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Real APR in the core and periphery countries

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3. Diverging or converging?

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Relative Standard Deviation between EU member states

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3. Diverging and converging

• A continuing decrease in relative mean deviation among EU27• Persistent convergence in terms of household indebtedness per capita

and to GDI since 2000

• The rate of convergence• Tended to accelerate year after year until 2004

• Was interrupted before the crisis by the indebtedness of the European periphery rising above the EU average

• Subsequently, by the financial crisis and fast debt reduction in some new member states

• The rate of convergence of CEE10 to EU15 has been significantly slowed down by the crisis.

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Divergence influnced by the movement between the core and the periphery

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Not as much between theEast and the West

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Real APR in the old and new member states

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3. Diverging or converging?

• Very little convergence between the East and the West• Some convergence between the core and the periphery

• Hopeful? Is this what we need?

• Somehow a god result in terms of what we would expect of the recovery, but…

• The most leveraged countries have the most difficulties with aggregate demand, which retrenches as households deleverage

• It can be good but depresses the economy further and renders remainders of the debt less stable and consequences of it more severe

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4. Should EU households reduce their debt

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What influences deleveraging

• An intuitive conclusion would be that recent debt-reduction would be associated high household leverage

• This is not the case

• The most significant determinants are the rates of credit expansion before the crisis and interest rates

• Interest rates reflecting the rising risk premia linked to income disruptions (unemployment, stagnant wages)

• This points out to a limited convergence and raises doubts on the structural homogeneity of EU member states

• In other words: high debt in some countries is more sustainable than in others even if controlled for income!

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Deleveraging because of what?

ATBE

BG

CY

CZ

DEDK

EE

EL

ES

FI

FR

HU

IE

IT

LUMT

NL

PL

PT

RO

SE

SI

SK

UK

-20%

-10%

0%10

%20

%

Deb

t gro

wth

(cris

is p

erio

d, 2

009-

2012

)

0% 100% 200% 300%

Debt growth (pre-crisis period, 2003-2007)

Linear prediction plot (R²= .2675***)

ATBE

BG

CY

CZ

DEDK

EE

EL

ES

FI

FR

HU

IE

IT

LU

NL

PL

PT

RO

SE

SI

SK

UK

0% 100% 200%

Leverage to GDI at peak (December 2007)

Linear prediction plot (R²= .0024)

Source: ECRI, ECB, Eurostat; Note: *** p<0.01

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Deleverage now or deleverage later

• Should households deleverage now?• There is debt overhang in some member states, but its

reduction during the recession can be more costly than leaving it alone for the moment

• The effects of household debt on demand and historic data suggest that deleveraging should occur after the recovery

• Most of the effects on household debt cannot be dealt with on the regulatory level

• The real problem not debt but weak or no recovery

• The monetary transmission mechanisms


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