The most recent crisis prompted regulatory authorities to implement directives prescribing actions to resolve systemic banking crises. Recent findings show that government intervention results in only a small proportion of bank recoveries. This study examines the reasons for this failure and evaluates the effectiveness of regulatory instruments, demonstrating that weaker banks are more likely to receive government support, that the support extended addresses banks’ specific issues, and that supported banks are more likely to face bankruptcy than non-supported banks. Therefore, government interventions must be sufficiently large, and an optimal banking recovery program must include a deep restructuring process
Costly bank failures in the past two decades have focused attention on the need to find ways to impr...
How much leeway did governments have in designing bank bailouts and deciding on the height of interv...
The Global Financial Crisis was a reminder that such crises are endemic to modern capitalism. This d...
The most recent crisis prompted regulatory authorities to implement directives prescribing actions t...
Systemic banking crises often continue into recessions with large output losses (Reinhart & Rogoff 2...
This paper analyzes the effectiveness of different government policies to prevent the emergence of b...
How much leeway did governments have in designing bank bailouts and deciding on the height of interv...
Abstract Since the Great Depression and the stock market crash in 1929, the global economy has exper...
Recapitalizing banks in a systemic crisis is a complex medium-term process that requires significant...
Intervention has taken different forms in different countries and periods of time. Moreover, recent ...
How much leeway did governments have in designing bank bailouts and deciding on the height of interv...
We model unique state interventions to rescue commercial banks during the 2008-09 global financial c...
A common legacy of banking crises is a large increase in government debt, as fiscal resources are us...
Comparing bank rescue schemes in France and Germany during the banking crisis of 2008–9, this articl...
When things are good nobody asks why. When things are too good to be true, only a few realise that i...
Costly bank failures in the past two decades have focused attention on the need to find ways to impr...
How much leeway did governments have in designing bank bailouts and deciding on the height of interv...
The Global Financial Crisis was a reminder that such crises are endemic to modern capitalism. This d...
The most recent crisis prompted regulatory authorities to implement directives prescribing actions t...
Systemic banking crises often continue into recessions with large output losses (Reinhart & Rogoff 2...
This paper analyzes the effectiveness of different government policies to prevent the emergence of b...
How much leeway did governments have in designing bank bailouts and deciding on the height of interv...
Abstract Since the Great Depression and the stock market crash in 1929, the global economy has exper...
Recapitalizing banks in a systemic crisis is a complex medium-term process that requires significant...
Intervention has taken different forms in different countries and periods of time. Moreover, recent ...
How much leeway did governments have in designing bank bailouts and deciding on the height of interv...
We model unique state interventions to rescue commercial banks during the 2008-09 global financial c...
A common legacy of banking crises is a large increase in government debt, as fiscal resources are us...
Comparing bank rescue schemes in France and Germany during the banking crisis of 2008–9, this articl...
When things are good nobody asks why. When things are too good to be true, only a few realise that i...
Costly bank failures in the past two decades have focused attention on the need to find ways to impr...
How much leeway did governments have in designing bank bailouts and deciding on the height of interv...
The Global Financial Crisis was a reminder that such crises are endemic to modern capitalism. This d...