发展中国家利率控制与信贷分配

Interest Controls and Credit Allocation in Developing Countries

Journal of Money, Credit and Banking · 1984
被引 27
人大 A-ABS 4

中文导读

探讨发展中国家利率上限和补贴政策导致的信贷配给问题,分析非价格配给如何扭曲信贷分配,影响经济增长。

Abstract

PLANNING AUTHORITIES in less developed countries (LDCs) often regard financial market intervention as an efficient way to induce gr()wth and structural change. Elaborate regimes of interest ceilings and subsidies have been used to promote industrialization, exporting, geographic decentralization, and other national priorities. Some of these programs have doubtless achieved their intended objectives. However, with inflation frequently exceeding controlled interest rates, they have also tended to generate an excess demand for loans. Legally prohibited from price discrimination, creditors have been obliged to allocate their portfolios according to various criteria, and loan applicants whom creditors find relatively unappealing have been forced to rely heavily on self-finance or the unregulated curb markets. McKinnon (1973) and Shaw (1973) have argued that such rationing regimes lead to serious factor misallocations, inappropriate technology choices, and unnecessarily low growth rates. In the past decade their perspective has been formalized with macro models of financially repressed economies, and numerous supportive empirical studies have been reported (Fry (1982) surveys the literature). Surprisingly, however, several fundamental micro issues have received little attention: what is the nature of the bias in credit allocation that nonprice rationing induces; and how does

利率管制信贷配给发展中国家金融抑制