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15 May 2019

BIS: How does the interaction of macroprudential and monetary policies affect cross-border bank lending?


Authors combine a rarely accessed BIS database on bilateral cross-border lending flows with cross-country data on macroprudential regulations. They study the interaction between the monetary policy of major international currency issuers (USD, EUR and JPY) and macroprudential policies enacted in source (home) lending banking systems.

Authors find significant interactions. Tighter macroprudential policy in a home country mitigates the impact on lending of monetary policy of a currency issuer. For instance, macroprudential tightening in the UK mitigates the negative impact of US monetary tightening on USD-denominated cross-border bank lending outflows from UK banks. Vice-versa, easier macroprudential policy amplifies impacts. The results are economically significant.

Central banks increasingly use macroprudential tools. These tools interact with monetary policy in affecting credit supply and thereby the economy. Yet studying this interaction is difficult, because monetary policy and macroprudential tools work in a similar way and address similar objectives.

Their main contribution is to identify the interaction of monetary and macroprudential policies in international bank lending. This is challenging to do within a single country, given the similarities between the two types of policy. Authors focus on cross-border lending in three reserve currencies: the US dollar, the euro and the yen. The monetary policies associated with these three currencies are independent of domestic macroprudential policies used in the home country of the lending bank. As an example, they look at how US monetary policy interacts with UK macroprudential policy in affecting cross-border bank lending from UK banks to borrowers in foreign countries, such as Malaysia. Using a rarely accessed BIS data set, they exclude observations where independence is not guaranteed. In the previous example, they exclude the United States both as a home banking system and as a borrowers' country. This allows them to study precisely how the two policies work together.

They find significant policy interaction. Tighter UK macroprudential policy mitigates the negative (positive) impact of US monetary policy tightening (easing) on US dollar cross-border lending from UK banks. Conversely, easier macroprudential policy amplifies the impact of monetary policy. The results imply that this interaction has an economically and statistically significant impact on cross-border loan supply.

Working paper



© BIS - Bank for International Settlements


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