Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office

10/17/2024 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 10/17/2024 09:58

An empirical analysis of the interaction between monetary policy and commercial bank lending in Nigeria

An empirical analysis of the interaction between monetary policy and commercial bank lending in Nigeria

Examines the transmission mechanism from monetary policy instruments.

From:Foreign, Commonwealth & Development OfficePublished31 January 2024
Country: NigeriaDocument Type: Research PaperTheme: Economic GrowthAuthors: Emekaraonye, Chukwunenye Ferguson, Dick, Emmanuel Ikechukwu, Agu, Chukwuma

Abstract

Using a recursive structural vector autoregressive model and quarterly data from 1986Q1 to 2019Q4, this study examines the transmission mechanism from monetary policy instruments, specifically the monetary policy rate, base money, and nominal exchange rate, to outcome variables (prices and credit to the private sector) in Nigeria.

The data showed structural breaks in 2004Q2, 2009Q3 and 2014Q3, which coincided with the 2004 banking consolidation, the 2009 Sanusi-led regulatory measures and the appointment of Godwin Emefiele as the Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria in 2014. Accordingly, policy instrument transmission tests were conducted along three scenarios 2004, 2009 and 2014 to evaluate the changes that may have been imposed on the policy transmission mechanism by the reforms. Under the 2004 consolidation scenario, the reforms strengthened only the interest rate anchor (monetary policy rate), causing it to be effective in influencing credit to the private sector (CPS). Innovations in other monetary policy instruments led to insignificant responses in the outcome variables. Even base money, which previously impacted both prices and credit to the private sector, became insignificant and ineffective after 2004. Sanusi's regime did not strengthen the impact of any of the monetary policy instruments on prices and credit to the private sector. Base money, that impacted outcome variables in some periods before 2009, became insignificant thereafter. Similarly, the 2014 development and sectoral support programmes under Emefiele also did not strengthen monetary policy instruments. Overall, the study affirms the position that monetary policy reforms may not always strengthen policy instruments to regulate or influence prices and credit to the private sector, especially when the transmission is indirect.

This research is part of the Capacity for Economic Research and Policy making in Africa (CERPA) programme.

Citation

Ferguson CF, Dick EI and Agu C. 'An empirical analysis of the interaction between monetary policy and commercial bank lending in Nigeria' Research Paper 548, 2024

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An empirical analysis of the interaction between monetary policy and commercial bank lending in Nigeria

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Published 31 January 2024