This paper examines the impact of natural disaster experiences on banks’ business practices. Using earthquake and banking data for California, we find that banks that have had stronger earthquake experiences change their practices, both as a result of the natural disasters’ effects on local deposit supply and through changes in banks’ risk perceptions. These banks have a smaller exposure to real estate, maintain higher equity levels, and are more likely to lend to high-income borrowers. This paper confirms, therefore, that institutional memory exists in the banking sector and that banks and communities adapt to natural disasters interactively
This dissertation studies what financial and political institutions can do to reduce the impact of n...
We document that natural disasters significantly weaken the stability of banks with business activit...
This paper investigates the effect of banks’ lending capacity on firms’ capital investment. To overc...
This paper examines the impact of natural disaster experiences on banks’ business practices. Using e...
This paper studies how banks adjust their asset structure in response to changes in loan demand afte...
The increasing frequency and intensity of catastrophic natural disasters have the potential to stres...
We examine the relation between disaster risk and banks’ loan loss provisions (LLP). We propose a di...
We examine how natural disasters affect bank performance during the 2000-2017 period. The results su...
Following a natural disaster, the rate of economic growth recovers faster in less competitive bankin...
We study how bank residential mortgage lending standards are affected by risks to the local economy ...
This paper examines how banks adjust their asset structure in response to changes in loan demand fol...
In this paper, we show that alternative finance (e.g. private equity, crowdfunding and venture capit...
The supply of credit may increase or decrease following a natural disaster, depending on the extent ...
We examine changes in financial allocations in Rotating Savings and Credit Associations (Roscas), a ...
Using data for more than 160 countries in the period 1997-2010, we explore the impact of large-scale...
This dissertation studies what financial and political institutions can do to reduce the impact of n...
We document that natural disasters significantly weaken the stability of banks with business activit...
This paper investigates the effect of banks’ lending capacity on firms’ capital investment. To overc...
This paper examines the impact of natural disaster experiences on banks’ business practices. Using e...
This paper studies how banks adjust their asset structure in response to changes in loan demand afte...
The increasing frequency and intensity of catastrophic natural disasters have the potential to stres...
We examine the relation between disaster risk and banks’ loan loss provisions (LLP). We propose a di...
We examine how natural disasters affect bank performance during the 2000-2017 period. The results su...
Following a natural disaster, the rate of economic growth recovers faster in less competitive bankin...
We study how bank residential mortgage lending standards are affected by risks to the local economy ...
This paper examines how banks adjust their asset structure in response to changes in loan demand fol...
In this paper, we show that alternative finance (e.g. private equity, crowdfunding and venture capit...
The supply of credit may increase or decrease following a natural disaster, depending on the extent ...
We examine changes in financial allocations in Rotating Savings and Credit Associations (Roscas), a ...
Using data for more than 160 countries in the period 1997-2010, we explore the impact of large-scale...
This dissertation studies what financial and political institutions can do to reduce the impact of n...
We document that natural disasters significantly weaken the stability of banks with business activit...
This paper investigates the effect of banks’ lending capacity on firms’ capital investment. To overc...