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Analysis of the relationship between business cycles and bank credit extenstion : evidence from South Africa

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dc.contributor.advisor Serumaga-Zake, Philip
dc.contributor.author Chakanyuka, Goodman
dc.date.accessioned 2015-10-20T09:22:06Z
dc.date.available 2015-10-20T09:22:06Z
dc.date.issued 2015-06
dc.identifier.citation Chakanyuka, Goodman (2015) Analysis of the relationship between business cycles and bank credit extenstion : evidence from South Africa, University of South Africa, Pretoria, <http://hdl.handle.net/10500/19590> en
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10500/19590
dc.description.abstract This study provides evidence of the relationship between bank-granted credit and business cycles in South Africa. The study is conducted in three phases, namely qualitative research (Phase I), quantitative research (Phase II) and econometric analysis (Phase III). A sequential (connected data) mixed methodology (Phase I and II) is used to collect and analyze primary data from market participants. The qualitative research (Phase I) involves structured interviews with influential or well informed people on the subject matter. Phase I of the study is used to understand the key determinants of bank credit in South Africa and to appreciate how each of the credit aggregates behaves during alternate business cycles. Qualitative survey results suggest key determinants of commercial bank credit in South Africa as economic growth, collateral value, bank competition, money supply, deposit liabilities, capital requirements, bank lending rates and inflation. The qualitative results are used to formulate questions of the structured survey questionnaire (Quantitative research- Phase II). The ANOVA and Pearman’s product correlation analysis techniques are used to assess relationship between variables. The quantitative results show that there is direct and positive relationship between bank lending behavior and credit aggregates namely economic growth, collateral value, bank competition and money supply. On the other hand, the results show that there is a negative relationship between credit growth and bank capital and lending rates. Overall, the quantitative findings show that bank lending in South Africa is procyclical. The survey results indicate that the case for demand-following hypothesis is stronger than supply-leading hypothesis in South Africa. The econometric methodology is used to augment results of the survey study. Phase III of the study re-examines econometric relationship between bank lending and business cycles. The study employs cointegration and vector error correction model (VECM) techniques in order to test for existence of long-run relationship between the selected variables. Granger causality test technique is applied to the variables of interest to test for direction of causation between variables. The study uses quarterly data for the period of 1980:Q1 to 2013:Q4. Business cycles are determined and measured by Gross Domestic Product at market prices while bank-granted credit is proxied by credit extension to the private sector. The econometric test results show that there is a significant long-run relationship between economic growth and bank credit extension. The Granger causality test provides evidence of unidirectional causal relationship with direction from economic growth to credit extension for South Africa. The study results indicate that the case for demand-following hypothesis is stronger than supply-leading hypothesis in South Africa. Economic growth spurs credit market development in South Africa. Overall, the results show that there is a stable long-run relationship between macroeconomic business cycles and real credit growth in South Africa. The results show that economic growth significantly causes and stimulates bank credit. The study, therefore, recommends that South Africa needs to give policy priority to promotion and development of the real sector of the economy to propel and accelerate credit extension. Economic growth is considered as the significant policy variable to stimulate credit extension. The findings therefore hold important implications for both theory and policy. en
dc.format.extent 1 online resource (xii, 230 leaves) : illustrations (some color)
dc.language.iso en en
dc.subject Bank credit en
dc.subject Business cycles en
dc.subject Credit extension en
dc.subject Cointegratrion en
dc.subject Correlation en
dc.subject Economic growth en
dc.subject Granger causality en
dc.subject Procyclicality en
dc.subject Vector error correction model en
dc.subject.ddc 338.5420968
dc.subject.lcsh Business cycles -- South Africa -- Econometric models en
dc.subject.lcsh Credit -- South Africa -- Econometric models en
dc.subject.lcsh Economic development -- South Africa -- Econometric models en
dc.subject.lcsh South Africa -- Economic conditions en
dc.title Analysis of the relationship between business cycles and bank credit extenstion : evidence from South Africa en
dc.type Thesis en
dc.description.department Business Management en
dc.description.degree D.B.L.


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