We model unique state interventions to rescue commercial banks during the 2008-09 global financial crisis with the complementary binary logistic model that accommodates their skewed distribution. Our findings show that large and illiquid banks, and banks from countries with weak regulations, and weak shareholder and creditor rights are more likely to receive state interventions. These findings remain robust to a restricted definition of state intervention, alternative measures of bank fundamentals, placebo estimations, counterfactual sampling with propensity scores, bank and country sample splits, and the standard logistic model. These bank and incremental country level predictors can help regulators and supervisors limit future state inter...
In this study, using the World Bank’s Bank Regulation and Supervision Survey (BRSS) data, we draw in...
We examine whether pre-crisis bank characteristics explain state support to European banks during ...
How much leeway did governments have in designing bank bailouts and deciding on the height of interv...
The 2008 financial crisis led to wide-scale State supported bank rescues. Even if quick reactions we...
Banks’ stability can be affected by economic fluctuations, banks’ risk-taking behavior, connections ...
Until 2006, the financial system prospered and was stable, and Basel II rules were viewed as contrib...
During the Global Financial Crisis (GFC), a number of countries suffered banking crises. This thesis...
Banks’ stability can be affected by economic fluctuations, banks’ risktaking behavior, connections a...
Low levels of bank capital and liquidity in combination with ongoing crises in other countries are s...
This chapter investigates the effectiveness and the motivation behind the choice of different types ...
Extraordinary amounts of public funds and/or assistance were made available to banks since the onse...
The global financial crisis of 2008 was followed by a wave of regulatory reforms that affected large...
The most recent crisis prompted regulatory authorities to implement directives prescribing actions t...
How much leeway did governments have in designing bank bailouts and deciding on the height of interv...
How much leeway did governments have in designing bank bailouts and deciding on the height of interv...
In this study, using the World Bank’s Bank Regulation and Supervision Survey (BRSS) data, we draw in...
We examine whether pre-crisis bank characteristics explain state support to European banks during ...
How much leeway did governments have in designing bank bailouts and deciding on the height of interv...
The 2008 financial crisis led to wide-scale State supported bank rescues. Even if quick reactions we...
Banks’ stability can be affected by economic fluctuations, banks’ risk-taking behavior, connections ...
Until 2006, the financial system prospered and was stable, and Basel II rules were viewed as contrib...
During the Global Financial Crisis (GFC), a number of countries suffered banking crises. This thesis...
Banks’ stability can be affected by economic fluctuations, banks’ risktaking behavior, connections a...
Low levels of bank capital and liquidity in combination with ongoing crises in other countries are s...
This chapter investigates the effectiveness and the motivation behind the choice of different types ...
Extraordinary amounts of public funds and/or assistance were made available to banks since the onse...
The global financial crisis of 2008 was followed by a wave of regulatory reforms that affected large...
The most recent crisis prompted regulatory authorities to implement directives prescribing actions t...
How much leeway did governments have in designing bank bailouts and deciding on the height of interv...
How much leeway did governments have in designing bank bailouts and deciding on the height of interv...
In this study, using the World Bank’s Bank Regulation and Supervision Survey (BRSS) data, we draw in...
We examine whether pre-crisis bank characteristics explain state support to European banks during ...
How much leeway did governments have in designing bank bailouts and deciding on the height of interv...