After the recent financial crisis has hooked the banking system to its very foundations, Hartmut Brinkmeyer contributes to the question of how bank characteristics influence bank loan supply during crisis periods by developing a well-founded theoretical framework. The econometrical design deploys a number of remarkably innovative ideas such as the implementation of a bank-specific, self-chosen target capital ratio or a very convincing approach to the disentanglement of loan supply and demand. The results of this study deliver a profound insight into the lending behavior of European banks and explicitly urge academic and practical discussion.
Contents
Monetary policy transmissionA new view: Implications of financial innovation for the bank lending channelBank lending against the background of the recent crisisEmpirical analysis: Determinants of bank lending during normal and crisis periods Target Groups
Researchers and students dealing with monetary policy, banking and finance, banking managementDecision makers in the fields of capital structure and treasury in banks The Author
Hartmut Brinkmeyer completed his doctoral thesis under the supervision of Prof. Dr. Christoph J. Börner and Prof. Dr. Ulrike Neyer at theHeinrich Heine University Düsseldorf. He studied Economics and Philosophy in Bayreuth, Rouen and Maastricht and works as a top management consultant.