JRFM, Vol. 18, Pages 635: The Impact of Non-Performing Loans on Credit Growth of Commercial Banks in Cambodia
Journal of Risk and Financial Management doi: 10.3390/jrfm18110635
Authors:
Bunthe Hor
Siphat Lim
This study investigated how banks’ balance sheet fundamentals shape their credit growth using panel co-integration methods and two estimation methods—pooled mean group (PMG) and dynamic fixed effects (DFE). Both approaches yielded consistent core results. First, weaker asset quality, proxied by higher non-performing loans (NPLs), was strongly and negatively related to credit growth: PMG produced a large negative long-run coefficient, and DFE’s error-correction form confirmed a significant adverse effect, consistent with higher provisioning, thinner capital buffers, and lower risk-taking. Second, capitalization (equity to assets) supported long-run growth under PMG, while DFE—imposing common slopes—did not, suggesting heterogeneous capitalization effects across banks that PMG captured but DFE muted. Third, operating expense intensity showed a positive long-run association with credit growth in both models, consistent with expansionary spending accompanying durable lending rather than costs causing lending. Long-run effects for liquidity and market-risk sensitivity were weaker or mixed: liquidity’s role was imprecise, and market-risk sensitivity was positive in PMG but not significant in DFE, again pointing to cross-sectional heterogeneity. Error-correction terms were large, negative, and highly significant in both models, indicating rapid convergence—near full adjustment within one period, with slight overshooting in DFE. Short-run results showed that higher liquidity and temporary cost spikes dampened contemporaneous growth. Policy implications emphasize sustained oversight of asset quality and prudent capital planning to support long-run credit supply.
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Bunthe Hor www.mdpi.com
