The Economic Effects of a Borrower Bailout : Evidence from an Emerging Market
Keywords
METROPOLITAN AREASELASTICITY
LOAN
BRANCH BANKING
FINANCIAL DEVELOPMENT
CREDITS
BALANCE SHEET
DISTRIBUTION OF CREDIT
SOURCE OF CREDIT
SHARE OF CREDIT
BANK BAILOUTS
POLITICAL ECONOMY
CORRUPTION
BENEFICIARIES
GOVERNMENT INTERVENTION
ECONOMIC POLICY
AMOUNT OF DEBT
ECONOMIC OUTCOMES
FINANCIAL CONSTRAINTS
ECONOMIC ACTIVITY
RECAPITALIZATION
AFFORDABILITY
ECONOMIC HISTORY
REGIONAL RURAL BANKS
INSTRUMENT
BORROWING
LENDING POLICIES
FORECLOSURES
ACCESS TO EXTERNAL FINANCE
MONETARY VALUES
FARM LOANS
ASSETS
BENEFICIARY
DEVELOPMENT POLICY
SETTLEMENTS
CREDIT MARKET
LEGISLATION
EXTERNAL FINANCING
ECONOMIC TRENDS
DEBT RESTRUCTURING
POLICY RESPONSE
CENTRAL BANK
CREDIT CONTRACTS
CREDIT OUTSTANDING
COMMODITY PRICES
WAGES
IMPACT OF DEBT
REINVESTMENT
BASE YEAR
MARKET FAILURES
INSTITUTIONAL ENVIRONMENT
INTERNATIONAL BANK
HOUSING
BAILOUTS
CREDIT ALLOCATION
ADMINISTRATIVE BODY
MORTGAGE MARKET
EMPLOYMENT
GDP
PRODUCTIVITY
RESERVE
COMMERCIAL BANKS
DEBTS
NPL
RESTRUCTURING PROGRAM
HOUSEHOLDS
FINANCIAL SECTOR
SETTLEMENT
RETURNS
POSITIVE EFFECTS
EVERGREENING
CREDIT DISCIPLINE
FUTURE CREDIT
BANK BRANCHES
BANK LIQUIDITY
PRODUCTIVE INVESTMENTS
TOTAL REVENUE
AGRICULTURAL DEBT
ACCESS TO CREDIT
EXISTING CREDIT
LOAN DEFAULTS
MANDATE
CREDIT LOSSES
TAX
RECESSIONS
AGRICULTURE
ALLOCATION OF CREDIT
CREDIT CULTURE
AGRICULTURAL SECTOR
MORTGAGE HOLDERS
DURABLE
FORECLOSURE
RURAL CREDIT
DUMMY VARIABLES
MORTGAGE DEBT
TRANSPARENCY
RECAPITALIZATIONS
BORROWER
RESERVE BANK OF INDIA
NON-PERFORMING LOAN
HOUSEHOLD DEBT
ACCOUNTING
GOVERNMENT SPENDING
DEBT
FINANCIAL SHOCKS
BENCHMARK
FARMERS
EFFECT OF DEBT
LOCAL BANK
SOURCE OF INFORMATION
FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE
BANK LENDING
LOAN DELINQUENCIES
INDEBTEDNESS
BORROWER BEHAVIOR
DEBT RELIEF
MACROECONOMICS
DEBT CONTRACTS
ELIGIBLE BORROWERS
DEBT LEVELS
DEPENDENT
LOAN SIZE
MARKET DATA
DUMMY VARIABLE
CONSUMPTION EXPENDITURE
LAND HOLDINGS
BUSINESS CYCLES
DEFAULTERS
COSTS OF CREDIT
MORAL HAZARD
CD
ECONOMIC PERFORMANCE
CONSUMER CREDIT
AMOUNT OF CREDIT
INSTITUTIONAL CREDIT
DEFAULT RATES
SHARE OF DEBT
PENALTIES
BANK CREDIT
BAD DEBTS
EMERGING MARKETS
LOCAL BUSINESS
BUDGET DEFICITS
ECONOMIC CRISIS
INDEBTED
BAILOUT
LEVERAGE
MICRO-DATA
FINANCIAL INTERMEDIARIES
LOAN SIZES
MICRODATA
LAND TENURE
CONSUMERS
PRODUCTIVE INVESTMENT
AGRICULTURAL CREDIT
CREDIT SPREADS
KEY CHALLENGE
SUPPLY OF CREDIT
CONDITIONAL DEBT
DEBT OVERHANG
VOTERS
LOAN REPAYMENT
DEFAULTS
ECONOMIC SHOCKS
FINANCIAL CRISIS
HOUSEHOLD DEBTS
RESTRUCTURING PROGRAMS
BANK POLICY
SHORT MATURITY
BANKING REGULATIONS
NEW CREDIT
MORTGAGE
REPAYMENT CAPACITY
LAND REFORMS
BANK BRANCH
BALANCE SHEETS
RENEGOTIATION
FINANCIAL INTERMEDIATION
MORTGAGES
EXTERNAL FINANCE
EXCLUSION
LABOR MARKET
AGRICULTURAL LOANS
EMERGING MARKET
UNION
NON-PERFORMING LOANS
MARKET CONDITIONS
LOAN PERFORMANCE
SOCIAL BANKING
STATE BANKS
AUDITS
RESERVE BANK
COLLATERAL
ELIGIBILITY CRITERIA
RURAL BANKS
LENDERS
HOME EQUITY
CREDIT MARKETS
CHECKS
INSTITUTIONAL ENVIRONMENTS
COST OF DEBT
TAX CODE
CONSUMER CREDIT CARD
CREDIT RATIONING
LOAN PAYMENTS
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http://hdl.handle.net/10986/20656Abstract
This paper studies the credit market implications and real effects of one the largest borrower bailout programs in history, enacted by the government of India against the backdrop of the 2008-2009 financial crisis. The study finds that the stimulus program had no effect on productivity, wages, or consumption, but led to significant changes in credit allocation and an increase in defaults. Post-program loan performance declines faster in districts with greater exposure to the program, an effect that is not driven by greater risk-taking of banks. Loan defaults become significantly more sensitive to the electoral cycle after the program, suggesting the anticipation of future credit market interventions as an important channel through which moral hazard in loan repayment is intensified.Date
2014-12-04Identifier
oai:openknowledge.worldbank.org:10986/20656http://hdl.handle.net/10986/20656
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CC BY 3.0 IGORelated items
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