Determinants of Non-Performing Loans for the EEC Region. A Financial Stability Perspective

This article investigates the determinants of non-performing loans for a panel of EEC countries and the implications for the real economy, covering the period 2005-2017. Among the determinants, the paper proposes macroeconomic factors, banking sector variables, and cost and governance indicators. Ad...

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Main Authors: Tatarici Luminita Roxana, Kubinschi Matei Nicolae, Barnea Dinu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sciendo 2020-12-01
Series:Management şi Marketing
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.2478/mmcks-2020-0036
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spelling doaj-2d759674d39f4601b062e7da27d33dca2021-05-02T19:52:24ZengSciendoManagement şi Marketing2069-88872020-12-0115462164210.2478/mmcks-2020-0036mmcks-2020-0036Determinants of Non-Performing Loans for the EEC Region. A Financial Stability PerspectiveTatarici Luminita Roxana0Kubinschi Matei Nicolae1Barnea Dinu2Bucharest University of Economic Studies,Bucharest, RomaniaBucharest University of Economic Studies,Bucharest, RomaniaBucharest University of Economic Studies,Bucharest, RomaniaThis article investigates the determinants of non-performing loans for a panel of EEC countries and the implications for the real economy, covering the period 2005-2017. Among the determinants, the paper proposes macroeconomic factors, banking sector variables, and cost and governance indicators. Additionally, the paper explores the extensive use of macroprudential measures in these countries. Using a panel with fixed effects and a dynamic GMM estimator, the results support the existing findings that adverse macroeconomic developments are generally associated with higher non-performing loans, while increases in NPLs have a rather transitory effect on the real economy and credit. NPL ratios increase if macroeconomic conditions deteriorate, while an improvement in the government effectiveness reduces them. A more profitable and better capitalized banking sector generally leads to lower NPLs. Moreover, countries with higher past credit growth rates witnessed higher NPLs in the periods that followed. These results support the use of macroprudential measures for increasing the resilience of borrowers, such as limits on the indebtedness level (such as debt service-to-income, DSTI or loan-to-value, LTV caps), as tools to temper the credit cycle.https://doi.org/10.2478/mmcks-2020-0036non-performing loansfinancial stabilitycredit growthmacroprudential policy
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tatarici Luminita Roxana
Kubinschi Matei Nicolae
Barnea Dinu
spellingShingle Tatarici Luminita Roxana
Kubinschi Matei Nicolae
Barnea Dinu
Determinants of Non-Performing Loans for the EEC Region. A Financial Stability Perspective
Management şi Marketing
non-performing loans
financial stability
credit growth
macroprudential policy
author_facet Tatarici Luminita Roxana
Kubinschi Matei Nicolae
Barnea Dinu
author_sort Tatarici Luminita Roxana
title Determinants of Non-Performing Loans for the EEC Region. A Financial Stability Perspective
title_short Determinants of Non-Performing Loans for the EEC Region. A Financial Stability Perspective
title_full Determinants of Non-Performing Loans for the EEC Region. A Financial Stability Perspective
title_fullStr Determinants of Non-Performing Loans for the EEC Region. A Financial Stability Perspective
title_full_unstemmed Determinants of Non-Performing Loans for the EEC Region. A Financial Stability Perspective
title_sort determinants of non-performing loans for the eec region. a financial stability perspective
publisher Sciendo
series Management şi Marketing
issn 2069-8887
publishDate 2020-12-01
description This article investigates the determinants of non-performing loans for a panel of EEC countries and the implications for the real economy, covering the period 2005-2017. Among the determinants, the paper proposes macroeconomic factors, banking sector variables, and cost and governance indicators. Additionally, the paper explores the extensive use of macroprudential measures in these countries. Using a panel with fixed effects and a dynamic GMM estimator, the results support the existing findings that adverse macroeconomic developments are generally associated with higher non-performing loans, while increases in NPLs have a rather transitory effect on the real economy and credit. NPL ratios increase if macroeconomic conditions deteriorate, while an improvement in the government effectiveness reduces them. A more profitable and better capitalized banking sector generally leads to lower NPLs. Moreover, countries with higher past credit growth rates witnessed higher NPLs in the periods that followed. These results support the use of macroprudential measures for increasing the resilience of borrowers, such as limits on the indebtedness level (such as debt service-to-income, DSTI or loan-to-value, LTV caps), as tools to temper the credit cycle.
topic non-performing loans
financial stability
credit growth
macroprudential policy
url https://doi.org/10.2478/mmcks-2020-0036
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AT kubinschimateinicolae determinantsofnonperformingloansfortheeecregionafinancialstabilityperspective
AT barneadinu determinantsofnonperformingloansfortheeecregionafinancialstabilityperspective
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