Volume 18, Issue 5 December 2022

Deleverage and Defaults in the United Kingdom

Abstract

This paper studies the effect of monetary policy on debt deleveraging in the United Kingdom, finding that households' credit quality functions as a transmission channel for monetary policy. I use a VAR model to estimate the effect of monetary policy on household debt deleverage, measuring both the response of the overall debt stock and the number of individual insolvencies. This has implications for monetary policy rules targeting financial stability. I find that a monetary tightening produces defaults. A time-varying causality test confirms that causality goes from house prices to real debt and shows that the bank rate predicts insolvencies when it is high.

Authors

  • Mario Lupoli

JEL codes

  • E52
  • E58

Other papers in this issue

Javier Andrés and Óscar Arce and Jesús Fernández-Villaverde and Samuel Hurtadod

Aneta Hryckiewicz and Petra Pawlowski and Piotr Michal Mazur and Marcin Borsuk

Matthieu Darracq Pariès and Peter Karadi and Christoffer Kok and Kalin Nikolov

Markus Behn and Giacomo Mangiante and Laura Parisi and Michael Wedow