Volume 15, Issue 3 September 2019

Deleveraging and Consumer Credit Supply in the Wake of the 2008-09 Financial Crisis

Abstract

We explore the sources of the decline in household nonmortgage debt following the collapse of the housing market in 2006. First, we use data from the Federal Reserve Board's Senior Loan Officer Opinion Survey to document that, post-2006, banks tightened consumer lending standards more in counties that experienced a more pronounced house price decline (the pre-2006 "boom" counties). We then use the idea that renters did not experience an adverse wealth or collateral shock when the housing market collapsed to identify a general consumer credit supply shock. Our evidence suggests that a tightening of the supply of non-mortgage credit that was independent of the direct effects of lower housing collateral values played an important role in households' non-mortgage debt reduction. Renters decreased their non-mortgage debt more in boom counties than in non-boom counties, but homeowners did not. We argue that this wedge between renters and homeowners can only have arisen from a general tightening of banks' consumer lending stance. Using an IV approach, we trace this effect back to a reduction in bank capital of banks in boom counties.

Authors

  • Reint Gropp
  • John Krainer
  • Elizabeth Laderman

JEL codes

  • E21
  • G21

Other papers in this issue

Martina Jašová and Richhild Moessner and Elöd Takáts

Luca Guerrieri and Matteo Iacoviello and Francisco Covas and John C. Driscoll and Mohammad Jahan-Parvar and Michael Kiley and Albert Queralto and Jae Sim

Juha Kilponen and Massimiliano Pisani and Sebastian Schmidt and Vesna Corbo and Tibor Hledik and Josef Hollmayr and Samuel Hurtado and Paulo Júlio and Dmitry Kulikov and Matthieu Lemoine and Matija Lozej and Henrik Lundvall and José R. Maria and Brian Micallef and Dimitris Papageorgiou and Jakub Rysanek and Dimitrios Sideris and Carlos Thomas and Gregory de Walque