Banks in low-income countries face severe liquidity risk due to volatile deposits, which destabilize their funding, and dysfunctional liquidity markets, which induce expensive interbank and central bank lending. Such liquidity risk dissuades the transformation of short-term deposits into long-term loans and deters long-term investment. To validate this mechanism, we exploit a Sharia-compliant levy in Pakistan, which generates unintended and quasi-experimental variation in liquidity risk, with data from the credit registry and firm imports. We find that banks with a stronger exposure to liquidity risk lower their supply of long-term finance, which reduces the long-term investment of connected firms.
This is a pre-copyedited, author-produced version of an article accepted for publication in The Review of Economic Studies following peer review. The version of record M Ali Choudhary, Nicola Limodio, Liquidity Risk and Long-Term Finance: Evidence from a Natural Experiment, The Review of Economic Studies, Volume 89, Issue 3, May 2022, Pages 1278–1313, https://doi.org/10.1093/restud/rdab065 is available online at: https://doi.org/10.1093/restud/rdab065.