Álvaro Fernández-Gallardo, Simon Lloyd and Ed Manuel
Since the 2007–09 Global Financial Crisis, central banks have developed a range of macroprudential policies ('macropru') to address fault lines in the financial system. A key aim of macropru is to reduce 'left-tail risks' – ie, minimise the probability and severity of future economic crises. However, building this resilience could influence other parts of the GDP-growth distribution and so may not always be costless. In our Working Paper, we gauge these potential costs and benefits by estimating the effects of macropru on the entire GDP-growth distribution, and explore its transmission channels. We find that macropru is effective at reducing the variance of GDP growth, and that it does so by reducing the probability and severity of excessive credit booms.