Name File Type Size Last Modified
BOJ location data.dta application/x-stata-dta 7.6 KB 12/07/2021 03:55:PM
Bank closure data.dta application/x-stata-dta 144 KB 12/07/2021 03:55:PM
Bank location data.dta application/x-stata-dta 204.5 KB 12/07/2021 03:55:PM
Loan and Deposit growth Data.dta application/x-stata-dta 1.1 MB 12/07/2021 03:55:PM
Loan and Deposit growth Data_extended.dta application/x-stata-dta 1.4 MB 12/07/2021 03:55:PM
Readme.pdf application/pdf 103.4 KB 12/07/2021 04:22:PM
Replication.do text/plain 17.2 KB 12/07/2021 03:55:PM
Replication_Figure.do text/plain 2.7 KB 12/07/2021 03:55:PM
Replication_Figure5.do text/plain 757 bytes 12/07/2021 03:55:PM
Replication_FigureAB.do text/plain 2.3 KB 12/07/2021 03:55:PM

Project Citation: 

Sawada, Michiru , Imai, Masami, and Okazaki, Tetsuji. Replication data for: The Effects of Lender of Last Resort on Financial Intermediation during the Great Depression in Japan. Ann Arbor, MI: Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research [distributor], 2021-12-07. https://doi.org/10.3886/E156141V1

Project Description

Summary:  View help for Summary  The Bank of Japan (BOJ) expanded its liquidity provision in response to a series of financial panics from 1931-1932; however, the BOJ restricted its lending mostly to correspondent banks. We use the BOJ’s preferential treatment of correspondent banks as a quasi-experimental setting to examine the impact of central bank lending on financial intermediation. We find that deposits and loans did not fall as fast for correspondent banks as for other banks during the panic period. Furthermore, correspondent banks were less likely to be closed. The results suggest that central banks’ liquidity provision plays a critical backstop role during financial stringency.



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