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The credit crunch and fall in employment during the Great Recession
Institution:1. Liechtenstein Institute, St. Luziweg 2, LI-9487 Bendern, Liechtenstein;2. Department of Economics, University of Innsbruck, Universitätsstrasse 15, Innsbruck A-6020, Austria;1. University of Lausanne and Swiss Finance Institute, Extranef 228, Chamberonne, 1015 Lausanne CH-1015, Switzerland;2. Duke University, Fuqua School of Business, 100 Fuqua Drive, Durham, NC 27708, USA;3. CEPR, London, UK;4. University of Lausanne and Swiss Finance Institute, Extranef 233, CH-1015, Switzerland
Abstract:We study how a bank credit crunch—a dramatic worsening of firm and consumer access to bank credit, such as the one observed over the Great Recession—translates into job losses in U.S. manufacturing industries. To identify the impact of the recent credit crunch, we rely on differences in the degree of dependence on external finance and of tangibility of assets across manufacturing industries and in the sensitivity of these industries? output to changes in the supply of consumer credit. We find that, for employment, household access to bank loans matters more than firm access to bank loans. In addition, we show that, over the recent financial crisis, tightening access to commercial and industrial loans and, in particular, consumer installment loans may have contributed significantly to the drop in employment in the manufacturing sector.
Keywords:Bank credit  Credit crunch  Job losses  Great Recession  Senior Loan Officer Opinion Survey
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