Does the removal of intra-state entry barriers increase welfare? Will all banks survive? Will it lead to a consolidation of the banking industry? The experience of credit market deregulation has not been always successful. Credit market liberalisation, via the removal of entry barriers, of limitations of activity and of markets for funding is generally recognised at the origin of banking crises like the American Savings & Loans, the Scandinavian countries’ banking crises at the end of the 80’s, the Japanese crises not yet resolved and more recently and on a large scale the East-Asian countries. However there are doubts about whether these problems arose because of liberalization per se or rather because of failure of prudential regulation i...
This paper analyzes the incentives for independent domestic bank regulators to coor-dinate regulator...
The financial crisis of the last three years has seen a dramatic change in the EU financial sector. ...
Regulatory change not seen since the Great Depression swept the U.S. banking industry beginning in t...
Does the removal of intra-state entry barriers increase welfare? Will all banks survive? Will it lea...
The European Conununity, (EC), is moving closer and closer to full economic integration. There is ge...
This paper analyses how entry by an international bank into a developing economy a¤ects the credit m...
Banking consolidation, spurred by interstate branching deregulation, is changing markets' competitiv...
Since the 1980s, a combination of forces, in particular financial liberalization and the IT revoluti...
The author discusses three areas she considers important in the evolution of the financial services ...
Over the past three decades, leading industrial nations and many developing countries have deregulat...
Abstract: Motivated by public policy debates about bank consolidation and conflicting theoretical pr...
From the 1980s onwards the banking sectors in all the industrialised countries have been experiencin...
textabstractThe establishment of the Banking Union (B.U.) creates a large banking market comparable ...
Consolidation processes in the banking sector are actively developing in different regions of the wo...
The countries in Central and Eastern Europe (CEE) that arenegotiating their entry into the European ...
This paper analyzes the incentives for independent domestic bank regulators to coor-dinate regulator...
The financial crisis of the last three years has seen a dramatic change in the EU financial sector. ...
Regulatory change not seen since the Great Depression swept the U.S. banking industry beginning in t...
Does the removal of intra-state entry barriers increase welfare? Will all banks survive? Will it lea...
The European Conununity, (EC), is moving closer and closer to full economic integration. There is ge...
This paper analyses how entry by an international bank into a developing economy a¤ects the credit m...
Banking consolidation, spurred by interstate branching deregulation, is changing markets' competitiv...
Since the 1980s, a combination of forces, in particular financial liberalization and the IT revoluti...
The author discusses three areas she considers important in the evolution of the financial services ...
Over the past three decades, leading industrial nations and many developing countries have deregulat...
Abstract: Motivated by public policy debates about bank consolidation and conflicting theoretical pr...
From the 1980s onwards the banking sectors in all the industrialised countries have been experiencin...
textabstractThe establishment of the Banking Union (B.U.) creates a large banking market comparable ...
Consolidation processes in the banking sector are actively developing in different regions of the wo...
The countries in Central and Eastern Europe (CEE) that arenegotiating their entry into the European ...
This paper analyzes the incentives for independent domestic bank regulators to coor-dinate regulator...
The financial crisis of the last three years has seen a dramatic change in the EU financial sector. ...
Regulatory change not seen since the Great Depression swept the U.S. banking industry beginning in t...