Event

Banks Are Not Intermediaries Of Loanable Funds – Facts, Theory And Evidence

Join Michael Kumhof, from the Bank of England, for this week's Department of Economics seminar

  • Tue 30 Apr 19

    16:00 - 17:30

  • Colchester Campus

    Economics Common Room 5B.307

  • Event type

    Lectures, talks and seminars

  • Event organiser

    Economics, Department of

In today's seminar Michael Kumhof discusses his paper on Banks Are Not Intermediaries Of Loanable Funds – Facts, Theory And Evidence


Abstract

In the loanable funds model, banks are modelled as resource-trading intermediaries that receive deposits of physical savings from savers before lending them to borrowers. In the financing model, banks are modelled as financial intermediaries whose loans are funded by exnihilo creation of deposits that facilitate physical trading among nonbanks. The financing model predicts larger and faster changes in bank lending and greater real effects of financial shocks. Aggregate bank balance sheets exhibit very high volatility, as predicted by financing models. Alternative explanations of volatility in physical savings, net securities purchases or asset valuations have almost no support in the data.