
Economics Department Working Paper Series
Working Paper Number
2021-12
Publication Date
2021
Abstract
With an emphasis on contributing to macroeconomic pedagogy we examine the collateral multiplier by comparing it to the traditional money multiplier in a simplified framework of traditional banking and shadow banking in which government bonds are the core assets. While the money multiplier is a measure of the ability of the banking system to intermediate sovereign debt by creating deposits, the collateral multiplier is a measure of the shadow banking system’s ability to intermediate sovereign debt by creating shadow money. It also measures the degree of re-use of sovereign debt as collateral. In this setup, the collateral multiplier is defined as the ratio between dealer banks’ matched book repo activity relative to their trading book. Using the New York Fed’s Primary Dealer Statistics data, we empirically estimate the collateral multiplier for U.S. Treasury repo collateral. Our model and empirical results shed light on the transmission mechanisms of monetary policy channeled through shadow banks and on the U.S. Treasuries market turmoil induced by COVID-19 in March 2020.
DOI
https://doi.org/10.7275/23485383
License
UMass Amherst Open Access Policy
Recommended Citation
Michl, Thomas R. and Park, Hyun Woong, "Shadow Banks and the Collateral Multiplier" (2021). Economics Department Working Paper Series. 309.
https://doi.org/10.7275/23485383