We study how market power affects investment and welfare when banks choose between restricting loan sizes and monitoring, in order to alleviate an underlying moral hazard problem. The impact of market power on aggregate welfare is the result of two countervailing effects. An increase in banks' market power results in: (i) higher lending rates, which worsens the borrower's incentive problem and reduces investment by unmonitored firms, (ii) higher monitoring effort, which reduces the proportion of credit-constrained firms. Whenever the second effect dominates, it is optimal to provide banks with some degree of market power
We analyze an imperfectly-competitive market for loans where loan-making institutions set both inter...
Less-intense competition for deposits, by mitigating banks’ incentive to take excessive risks, is tr...
Empirical evidence shows that banks tend to lend too much during booms, and too littleduring recessi...
We study how market power affects investment and welfare when banks choose between restricting loan ...
This paper studies moral hazard in banking due to delegated mon-itoring in an environment of aggrega...
This paper studies moral hazard in banking due to delegated mon-itoring in an environment of aggrega...
We model the relationship between market power and both loan interest rates and bank risk without pl...
n imperfectly competitive credit markets, banks can face a tradeoff between exploiting their market ...
Under the traditional “competition-fragility ” view, more bank competition erodes market power, decr...
Under the traditional “competition-fragility ” view, more bank competition erodes market power, decr...
This paper studies moral hazard in banking due to delegated monitoring in an environment of aggregat...
This paper studies moral hazard in banking due to delegated monitoring in an environment of aggregat...
I propose a new characterization of the relevant economic market for commercial lending. I claim tha...
I propose a new characterization of the relevant economic market for commercial lending. I claim tha...
Recent literature (Boyd and De Nicoló, 2005) has argued that competition in the loan market lowers b...
We analyze an imperfectly-competitive market for loans where loan-making institutions set both inter...
Less-intense competition for deposits, by mitigating banks’ incentive to take excessive risks, is tr...
Empirical evidence shows that banks tend to lend too much during booms, and too littleduring recessi...
We study how market power affects investment and welfare when banks choose between restricting loan ...
This paper studies moral hazard in banking due to delegated mon-itoring in an environment of aggrega...
This paper studies moral hazard in banking due to delegated mon-itoring in an environment of aggrega...
We model the relationship between market power and both loan interest rates and bank risk without pl...
n imperfectly competitive credit markets, banks can face a tradeoff between exploiting their market ...
Under the traditional “competition-fragility ” view, more bank competition erodes market power, decr...
Under the traditional “competition-fragility ” view, more bank competition erodes market power, decr...
This paper studies moral hazard in banking due to delegated monitoring in an environment of aggregat...
This paper studies moral hazard in banking due to delegated monitoring in an environment of aggregat...
I propose a new characterization of the relevant economic market for commercial lending. I claim tha...
I propose a new characterization of the relevant economic market for commercial lending. I claim tha...
Recent literature (Boyd and De Nicoló, 2005) has argued that competition in the loan market lowers b...
We analyze an imperfectly-competitive market for loans where loan-making institutions set both inter...
Less-intense competition for deposits, by mitigating banks’ incentive to take excessive risks, is tr...
Empirical evidence shows that banks tend to lend too much during booms, and too littleduring recessi...