
CÍMLAP
Csajbók Attila - Hudecz András - Tamási Bálint
Foreign currency borrowing of households in new EU member states
CONTENTS, ABSTRACT
Contents
Abstract
1 Introduction
2 Stylised facts of household FX borrowing in new EU member states
3 Households' demand for foreign currency loans
The role of liquidity constraints
4 Data, estimation method and results
Data description
Estimation method and results
Conclusion
References
Abstract
The post-Lehman phase of the financial crisis has exposed a number of
weaknesses in the banking sectors of the European Union's New Member
States (NMSs). one of these is the prevalence of lending in foreign
currency. While banks themselves in these countries have not taken on
sizeable currency risk directly, they passed it on to households and
the corporate sector. With large depreciations taking place or looming
in the region, the currency risk at households and corporates without
a natural hedge is now being transformed into credit risk for the
banking sector. This is creating a serious problem in maintaining
financial stability and cripples monetary policy in countries where it
operates primarily through the exchange rate channel.
The patterns of foreign currency lending to households in NMSs vary
widely both across countries and time periods. For example, FX lending
to households is virtually non-existent in the Czech Republic while in
some Baltic countries its share is close to 100 per cent of total
household lending. The main goal of the paper is (1) to present the
stylised facts of pre-crisis FX lending in NMSs systematically and (2)
to try to explain these differing patterns in an econometric model. in
order to do so, a panel database of household FX borrowing is
compiled, covering 10 NMSs in the period 1999-2008. our estimation
results suggest that the degree of household FX borrowing depends on
the interest rate differential, the institutional features of mortgage
financing and the monetary regime. Household FX borrowing tends to be
less prevalent if the interest rate differential is small, fixed
interest rate mortgage financing is available and the monetary
authority's fear of floating" is low.