Kautilya

Relationship banking and the credit market in India: An Empirical analysis

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dc.contributor.author Nachane, Dilip M
dc.contributor.author Ranade, Prasad P
dc.date.accessioned 2012-05-25T08:03:42Z
dc.date.available 2012-05-25T08:03:42Z
dc.date.issued 2012-05-25
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/2275/38
dc.description.abstract Relationship banking based on Okun's "customer credit markets" has important implications for monetary policy via the credit transmission channel. Studies of LDC credit markets from this point of view seem to be scanty and this paper attempts to address this lacuna. Relationship banking implies short-term disequilibrium in credit markets, suggesting the VECM (vector error-correction model) as an appropriate framework for analysis. We develop VECM models in the Indian context (for the period April 1991- December 2004 using monthly data) to analyse salient features of the credit market. An analysis of the ECMs (error-correction mechanisms) reveals that disequilibrium in the Indian credit market is adjusted via demand responses rather than supply responses, which is in accordance with the customer view of credit markets. Further light on the working of the model is obtained through the "generalized" impulse responses and "generalized" error decompositions (both of which are independent of the variable ordering). Our conclusions point towards firms using short-term credit as a liquidity buffer. This fact, together with the gradual adjustment exhibited by the "persistence profiles" provides substantive evidence in favour of "customer credit markets". en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.relation.ispartofseries WP;WP-2005-010
dc.subject Customer credit markets en_US
dc.subject Monetary policy en_US
dc.subject Co-integration en_US
dc.subject Impulse response en_US
dc.subject Persistence profiles en_US
dc.title Relationship banking and the credit market in India: An Empirical analysis en_US
dc.type Working Paper en_US


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