Search results for "G28"

showing 8 items of 8 documents

How Law Affects Lending

2006

A voluminous literature seeks to explore the relation between law and finance, but offers little insights into dynamic relation between legal change and behavioral outcomes or about the distributive effects of law on different market participants. The current paper disentangles the law-finance relation by using disaggregate data on banks’ lending patterns in 12 transition countries over a 8 year period. This allows us to control for country level heterogeneity and differentiate between different types of lenders. Employing a differences-in-differences methodology in an exclusive ”laboratory” setting as well as unique hand collected datasets on legal change as well as changes in bank ownersh…

Economics and EconometricsCollateralCreditorControl (management)Financial marketjel:G21Variety (cybernetics)jel:F34jel:G33creditor rights; credit market development; bankruptcy; collateral law; bank lendingjel:G28jel:F37BankruptcyAccountingLawAggregate dataNew entrantsBusinessFinance
researchProduct

Financial Sector Reform After the Crisis: Has Anything Happened?

2013

We analyze the reactions of stock returns and CDS spreads of banks from Europe and the United States to four major regulatory reforms in the aftermath of the subprime crisis, employing an event study analysis. In contrast to the public perception that nothing has happened, we find that financial markets indeed reacted to the structural reforms enacted at the national level. All reforms succeeded in reducing bail-out expectations, especially for systemic banks. However, banks' profitability was also affected, showing up in lower equity returns. The strongest effects were found for the Dodd-Frank Act (especially the Volcker rule), whereas market reactions to the German restructuring law were …

Financial sector reform financial stability Dodd-Frank Act Volcker rule Vickers reform German restructuring law Swiss too-big-to-fail regulation event studyjel:G28Dodd-Frank Act; event study; Financial sector reform; financial stability; German restructuring law; Swiss too-big-to-fail regulation; Vickers reform; Volcker rulejel:G21
researchProduct

Do debt crises boost financial reforms?

2014

"Published online: 15 Aug. 2014"

G28Economics and EconometricsParis Clubmedia_common.quotation_subjectN20Social SciencesDeveloping countryInstitutional qualityRecessionIMF stabilization programmesDebt0502 economics and businessEconomics050207 economicsSovereign debtmedia_commonFinanceFinancial reforms050208 financeP11business.industry05 social sciencesRecessionsCiências Sociais::Economia e Gestão1. No povertyInstitutional economicsSettore SECS-P/02 Politica EconomicaP16P34financial reforms debt crises recessions IMF stabilization programmes Paris Club institutional qualityDebt crises8. Economic growth:Economia e Gestão [Ciências Sociais]Internal debtbusinessInstitutional qualityApplied Economics Letters
researchProduct

With whom to merge? A tale of the Spanish banking deregulation process

2010

We propose a spatial competition model to study banks’ strategic responses to the asymmetric Spanish geographic deregulation process. We find that once the geographic deregulation process finishes, inter-regional mergers between savings banks are optimal whenever the economies of scale associated to merging activities are low. If there are large gains, then there will be mergers between savings and commercial banks.

G28L41Financial systemInternational tradeSpanish banking systemoptimal behaviorDeregulationCompetition modelC72Bankddc:330L51FusionSpanienL13DeregulierungBankenregulierungbusiness.industrybranch deregulationEconomies of scaleNichtkooperatives SpielG21mergersbusinessGeneral Economics Econometrics and FinanceMerge (version control)Public financeSERIEs
researchProduct

Holes in the Dike: the global savings glut, U.S. house prices and the long shadow of banking deregulation

2015

We explore empirically how capital inflows into the US and financial deregulation within the United States interacted in driving the run-up (and subsequent decline) in US housing prices over the period 1990-2010. To obtain an ex ante measure of financial liberalization, we focus on the history of interstate-banking deregulation during the 1980s, i.e. prior to the large net capital inflows into the US from China and other emerging economies. Our results suggest a long shadow of deregulation: in states that opened their banking markets to out-of-state banks earlier, house prices were more sensitive to capital inflows. We provide evidence that global imbalances were a major positive funding sh…

G28media_common.quotation_subjectHouse pricesjel:F20Monetary economicsjel:F40credit constraintsjel:G21Deregulationjel:G28CREDIT CONSTRAINTSSTATE BANKING DEREGULATIONsavings glut10007 Department of Economics0502 economics and businessddc:330F32G10state banking regulations050207 economicsSAVINGS GLUTEmerging marketsmedia_common050208 finance05 social sciencesHouse prices savings glut global imbalances credit constraints state banking deregulationGlobal imbalancesjel:F32jel:G10330 EconomicsInterest rateShock (economics)Net capital ruleCapital (economics)interstate banking deregulationPortfolioG21house pricesBusinessGeneral Economics Econometrics and FinanceF40state banking deregulationglobal imbalancesF20
researchProduct

What determines the likelihood of structural reforms?

2015

We use data for a panel of 60 countries over the period 1980–2005 to investigate the main drivers of the likelihood of structural reforms. We find that: (i) external debt crises are the main trigger of financial and banking reforms; (ii) inflation and banking crises are the key drivers of external capital account reforms; (iii) banking crises also hasten financial reforms; and (iv) economic recessions play an important role in promoting the necessary consensus for financial, capital, banking and trade reforms, especially in the group of OECD-countries. Additionally, we also observe that the degree of globalisation is relevant for financial reforms, in particular in the group of non-OECD cou…

MacroeconomicsG28Economics and EconometricEconomics and EconometricsCrisis episodemedia_common.quotation_subjectCrisis episodesRecessionPolitical setupSocial SciencesFinancial systemGlobalisationRecessionPoliticsGlobalization0502 economics and business050602 political science & public administrationEconomics050207 economicsStructural reformmedia_commonP1105 social sciences1. No povertyRecessionsSettore SECS-P/02 Politica EconomicaP16External debtCapital account0506 political scienceStructural reforms8. Economic growthPolitical Science and International Relations
researchProduct

Growing Like Germany: Local Public Debt, Local Banks, Low Private Investment

2021

The paper uses a panel of more than 1m German firms over 2010-2016, to provide the first firm-bank level evidence of local crowding out for a developed economy characterized by low interest rates and fiscal austerity. Our mechanism relies on two structural features of Germany's banking landscape: the local segmentation of credit markets for small and medium-sized firms (SME) and the role of local public banks in local public finance. Local public banks dominate lending to small and medium firms in Germany and also have an explicit mandate to lend to the local public sector. With spreads on local government debt at all-time lows, local public banks tried to break even, using their market pow…

crowding-outG28outHistoryPolymers and Plasticsmedia_common.quotation_subjectfirmlocal public financeFinancial systemIndustrial and Manufacturing EngineeringECON Department of Economics10007 Department of EconomicsDebtddc:330European imbalancesF32Balance sheetH32Market powerBusiness and International Managementmedia_commonregional banking integrationglobal and intra-European imbalancescrowding outcurrent accountlevel investmentfiscal austeritylocal public banksG28 F21global and intraEuropean imbalancesLocal public financeInvestment (macroeconomics)Crowding outfirm-level investment330 EconomicscrowdingInterest rateAusterityLocal governmentE22F21global and European imbalancesG21global and intraBusinessE40E62SSRN Electronic Journal
researchProduct

How viable are spanish credit cooperatives after recent bank capitalization and restructuring regulations?

2011

Over the past three years, major reforms have been approved in Spain in order to restructure the banking sector. The purpose of these reforms has been to reinforce the solvency of credit institutions through recapitalization and integration into larger organizations. The credit cooperatives have not presented any solvency problems which would justify these measures being applied to them. The problem that the financial authorities see in their case is their limited size. As a result, the credit cooperatives are immersed in an integration process which is not revolving around the Banco Cooperativo Español (BCE) or the Spanish Association of Rural Savings Banks, as might be expected, but is ta…

jel:G28Cooperative credit legislation financial crisis restructuring process Spain.jel:K29jel:G01jel:G21CIRIEC-España, revista de economía pública, social y cooperativa
researchProduct