2014
DOI: 10.1177/002795011422800103
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The Financial Crisis, Bank Lending and UK Productivity: Sectoral and Firm-Level Evidence

Abstract: This paper assesses the evidence and investigates some of the mechanisms by which the most recent banking sector crisis might have affected the supply side of the UK economy. We find clear evidence that the banking sector crisis affected credit supply to businesses and caused bank lending to decline. But we do not find much evidence of the heterogeneity in performance between different industrial sectors that would have been expected if banking sector impairment had been the key factor holding back productivit… Show more

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Cited by 20 publications
(18 citation statements)
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References 17 publications
(24 reference statements)
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“…Our findings echo those of other researchers who report a particular increase in constraints for large firms during the crisis period(Hetland and Mjøs 2012). Our results concerning different patterns of finance constraints for small and large firms are consistent withRiley et al (2014b) who find that bank credit constraints for large firms ended several years after the onset of the crisis while small firms experienced continuing constraints. Our findings on SMEs are somewhat at odds with…”
supporting
confidence: 91%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Our findings echo those of other researchers who report a particular increase in constraints for large firms during the crisis period(Hetland and Mjøs 2012). Our results concerning different patterns of finance constraints for small and large firms are consistent withRiley et al (2014b) who find that bank credit constraints for large firms ended several years after the onset of the crisis while small firms experienced continuing constraints. Our findings on SMEs are somewhat at odds with…”
supporting
confidence: 91%
“…"The cost of new [Bank] borrowing relative to Bank Rate peaked in around early 2009 and has since declined, albeit with a further rise in 2011 and 2012 in response to the effects of the Euro Area crisis on UK banks." (Riley et al 2014b).…”
Section: Endnotesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although our data include indicators of many potential drivers of firm performance, they do not include some drivers that are argued to be important in the literature. One such is access to credit, which became more difficult for SMEs in the aftermath of the financial crisis, albeit without clear evidence of a depressing effect on productivity (Riley et al, 2014). Another absentee is a measure of firms' growth ambitions, although the available evidence suggests that these are not strongly predictive of actual growth outcomes once other characteristics are controlled for (Department for Business Innovation and Skills, 2016).…”
Section: Analytical Approachmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Since our study analyses contemporary profitability of banks in the UK, it also considers the effect of the global financial crisis. We feel that the impact of the latter on profitability from lending activities in UK banks is another under-researched area (other studies include Riley et al, (2014) and Bolt et al (2012). This analysis of UK banks' financial performance and of the factors that might have shaped their business models and their overall risk appetite may be of interest to bankers, regulators and policy makers.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 97%