Swati Agarwal’s scientific contributions

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Publications (2)


Excess cash or excess headache? Demonetisation and bank behaviour in India
  • Article

August 2023

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17 Reads

Studies in Economics and Finance

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Swati Agarwal

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Purpose Sudden and unannounced policy changes by the government that provide banks with windfall deposits creates a challenge in terms of resource deployment. In the process, there is an impact on their risk and returns. Using data on domestic Indian commercial banks, this study aims to examine the impact of such an announcement – the 2016 demonetisation episode – on bank behaviour. Design/methodology/approach Using data on domestic Indian commercial banks during 2010–2020, the paper investigates the effect of a sudden and unannounced policy change on their risk and returns. Using the demonetisation undertaken in November 2016 as a natural experiment, the paper applies the difference-in-differences methodology to tease out the causal impact. Findings The findings reveal a decline in risk and an increase in returns of state-owned banks, consistent with a flight-to-safety. The response differed in terms of market and accounting measures and across state-owned banks with differing levels of capital and asset quality. Originality/value Although several aspects of the demonetisation episode have been well analysed, its impact on banks – the main conduits of the exercise – and in particular on their risk and returns, is an unaddressed area of research. Viewed from this standpoint, this is one of the early studies to undertake a comprehensive empirical analysis on this aspect.


Figure 1. Return vs risk for all banks
Excess Cash or Excess Headache? Demonetisation and Bank Behaviour
  • Conference Paper
  • Full-text available

December 2022

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15 Reads

Sudden and unannounced policy changes by the government can have significant consequences for commercial bank behaviour. Using data on Indian commercial banks during 2010-2020, we examine the impact of such an announcement – the 2016 demonetisation episode- on returns and risk. The findings reveal a decline in risk and an increase in returns of state-owned banks consistent with a flight-to-safety. The response differed in terms of market- and accounting measures and across state-owned banks with differing levels of capital and asset quality. Robustness checks lend credence to these findings.

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