# The effect of macroeconomic shocks on non-performing loans and credit risk in the iranian banking system using time-varying parameter vector autoregressions

**Authors:** Pejman Peykani, Mostafa Sargolzaei, Camelia Oprean-Stan, Hamidreza Kamyabfar, Atefeh Reghabi

PMC · DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0329587 · PLOS One · 2025-08-07

## TL;DR

This paper studies how macroeconomic shocks affect non-performing loans and credit risk in Iranian banks using advanced statistical models.

## Contribution

The novelty is the dynamic analysis of macroeconomic variables and their mutual impact on credit risk using TVP-VAR and panel data models.

## Key findings

- A 1% increase in inflation leads to a 0.0061% rise in non-performing loans.
- A 1% increase in unemployment results in a 0.0182% increase in non-performing loans.
- Interest rate shocks raise the default rate from 7.8% to 9.2% over time.

## Abstract

The increase in macroeconomic uncertainty leads to inefficiency in the financial and banking sectors, resulting in a rise in Non-Performing Loans (NPLs). When macroeconomic uncertainty increases, financial institutions experience higher inefficiencies, reflected in increased NPLs, and with proper management solutions, the economy can move toward sustainability. This research analyzes the effect of severe macroeconomic shocks on the NPLs of the Iranian banking system using the Time-Varying Parameter Vector Autoregressions (TVP-VAR) model and a Panel Data Model. The study utilizes data from 2007 to 2021 on key macroeconomic indicators such as economic growth rate, inflation rate, interest rate, unemployment rate, and exchange rate, along with the ratio of Non-Current Claims to Total Facilities as an index of credit risk and the ratio of loans to total assets as a risk-taking index for banks. Our innovation lies in analyzing these variables dynamically, accounting for their correlation and mutual impact. The findings indicate that a 1% increase in inflation leads to a 0.0061% increase in NPLs, while a 1% rise in the unemployment rate results in a 0.0182% increase in NPLs. Conversely, a 1% increase in GDP growth reduces NPLs by 0.0036%. Furthermore, shocks to interest rates, exchange rates, and economic growth increase credit risk, with a 1% interest rate shock raising the default rate from 7.8% to 9.2% over time.

## Full-text entities

- **Chemicals:** GDP (MESH:D006153)

## Full text

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## References

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12331042