This paper analyzes how learning a borrower's creditworthiness, from past lending decision by a rival bank that is publicly observable through private or public credit reporting systems, affects the performance of subsequent lending competitions. Our analysis of twicerepeated lending competitions demonstrates that such ex post information sharing causes inefficient and excessive screening of new borrowers when banks undertake transaction banking since each bank expects future disadvantages to result from the information revelation. Relationship banking arises endogenously as a defense against such anticipated disadvantage, and improves the economic efficiency by alleviating the excessive screening.43 p
In this paper we construct a theoretical model of spatial banking competition that considers the dif...
In this paper we construct a theoretical model of spatial banking competition that considers the dif...
How will banks evolve as competition increases from other banks and from the capital market? Will ba...
responsible for all remaining errors. 1 This paper analyzes how learning a borrower’s creditworthine...
A simple model of lending with endogenous screening predicts that risk-neutral banks tend to adopt t...
If banks have an informational monopoly about their clients, borrowers may curtail their effort leve...
We address a fundamental question in relationship banking: why do banks that make relationship loans...
Are inefficient lending booms the downside to more bank competition? In this paper, I develop a simp...
This paper adds endogenous screening to Broecker (1990) and shows the possibility of multiple screen...
In this paper, we use a spatial model of industrial organization that considers the differential inf...
In this paper we study a model in which asymmetrically informed banks compete with one another to of...
A bank determines whether potential borrowers are creditworthy, that is, whether they meet the bank'...
Over the past 20 years, scholars have discussed the impact of banking competition on the choi...
We demonstrate how endogenous information acquisition in credit markets creates lending cycles when ...
We address a fundamental question in relationship banking: why do banks that make relationship loans...
In this paper we construct a theoretical model of spatial banking competition that considers the dif...
In this paper we construct a theoretical model of spatial banking competition that considers the dif...
How will banks evolve as competition increases from other banks and from the capital market? Will ba...
responsible for all remaining errors. 1 This paper analyzes how learning a borrower’s creditworthine...
A simple model of lending with endogenous screening predicts that risk-neutral banks tend to adopt t...
If banks have an informational monopoly about their clients, borrowers may curtail their effort leve...
We address a fundamental question in relationship banking: why do banks that make relationship loans...
Are inefficient lending booms the downside to more bank competition? In this paper, I develop a simp...
This paper adds endogenous screening to Broecker (1990) and shows the possibility of multiple screen...
In this paper, we use a spatial model of industrial organization that considers the differential inf...
In this paper we study a model in which asymmetrically informed banks compete with one another to of...
A bank determines whether potential borrowers are creditworthy, that is, whether they meet the bank'...
Over the past 20 years, scholars have discussed the impact of banking competition on the choi...
We demonstrate how endogenous information acquisition in credit markets creates lending cycles when ...
We address a fundamental question in relationship banking: why do banks that make relationship loans...
In this paper we construct a theoretical model of spatial banking competition that considers the dif...
In this paper we construct a theoretical model of spatial banking competition that considers the dif...
How will banks evolve as competition increases from other banks and from the capital market? Will ba...