Banque de France Bulletin

Money and credit posted strong growth in 2018

Published on 29 August 2019
Authors : Youssef Mouheb, Guillaume Cousin

Bulletin n°224, article 5. In 2018, overnight deposits reached a record high in France, despite negative real interest rates (-1.7% on average in 2018 for non-financial corporations [NFCs], -1.2% for households). They concentrated 60% of all bank deposits. However, the share of broad money in households’ financial wealth remained stable at around 10%. Lending is the main source of money creation. In 2018, its growth rate in France exceeded that of the rest of the euro area (5.8% for household housing, 6.4% for NFCs, compared to 3.6% and 3.9% respectively in the euro area). Since mid-2014, NFC and household lending and deposit rates have converged downward in France and the euro area.

Image Loans to euro area non-financial corporations Description The graph proposes an observation of loans to euro area non-financial corporations in France, Germany, Italy, Spain and Euro area from 2013 to 2018 (Sources Banque de France calculationis and European Central Bank). Key figures: 1,017 billion euros: amount of overnight deposits in France at 31 December 2018 60%: share of M3 growth driven by loans to euro area non-financial corporations and households in 2018 40%: share of the rise in loans to euro area non-financial corporations driven by French banks in 2018

In 2018, the annual growth of money supply in the euro area (M3 aggregate: up 4.1%) was, once again, driven by the dynamism of overnight deposits (up 6.9%). This trend was even more pronounced in France, with an 8.5% growth rate in overnight deposits, slightly down on 2017.

1. Overnight deposits underpin money supply growth

Overnight deposits reached a record high in France in December 2018

In France, outstanding overnight deposits amounted to EUR 1,017 billion at 31 December 2018 (about half of GDP in 2018). Growth in overnight deposits is the cause of the acceleration in the French component of the broad money aggregate observed since 2015 (see Chart 1). From 2015 (beginning of the European Central Bank’s quantitative easing) to end-2018, the average contribution of overnight deposits to M3 growth amounted to 4.5%, almost three times the pace observed during the previous decade (1.6% on average between 2005 and 2014).

Since 2015, French non-financial corporations (NFCs) have accounted for 53% of overnight deposits, and households for 42% (see Chart 2).

In other euro area countries, money supply growth is also driven by overnight deposits

Since the start of 2012, euro area money supply growth has also been mainly driven by overnight deposits, included in M1. At 31 December 2018, overnight deposits amounted to EUR 7,115 billion and contributed 4.0% to M3 growth. Between 2005 and 2014, this pace averaged 2.5%.

Economic agents show a preference for the most liquid savings

The rise in the share of M1 in the M3 aggregate (see Chart 3) reflects economic agents’ stronger preference for liquid savings.

At the same time, the share of banknotes and coins in M1 decreased until 2017 and now stands at around 14% in the euro area and 17% in France (see Chart 41). This share reflects not only the rise in electronic payment technologies, in particular contactless payment for small purchases (introduced in France from 2014), but also the persistent use of banknotes and the high degree of user confidence in this payment instrument.

The decline in other components of money partly offsets the growth in overnight deposits

Money supply in the euro area rose on average by 4.1% in 2018, after having grown at a rate close to 5% since 2015 (see Chart 5). This rate remains below that prevailing before the 2008 financial crisis (around 7.2% between 1999 and 2007).

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Updated on 12 December 2023