This paper analyses the role of foreign banks in the Czech Republic, Estonia, Hungary, and Poland. With respect to their planned EU membership, these countries have to consider the full implementation of free trade in financial services. Generally, liberalizing the market access of foreign banks allows the production of financial services according to comparative advantage, it fosters competition, it promotes bank privatization, and it facilitates a transfer of know-how into the emerging financial systems. The most important sequencing issue that arises is that the incumbent banks should have been recapitalized for their truly inherited bad loans before markets are opened up. In view of the reform progress that has already been made in the ...
In the three fast track, Central European transition countries, Hungary, Poland and the Czech Republ...
This research project undertook a combined quantitative and qualitative analysis of the foreign entr...
2008 This Working Paper should not be reported as representing the views of the IMF. The views expre...
In the last fifteen years foreign banks have expanded their presence significantly in almost all dev...
This article analyses the implications of the recently observed sharp expansion of foreign banks in ...
The countries in Central and Eastern Europe (CEE) that arenegotiating their entry into the European ...
SIGLEAvailable from Bibliothek des Instituts fuer Weltwirtschaft, ZBW, Duesternbrook Weg 120, D-2410...
Using a newly developed database for 8 transition economies, this paper examines whether reforms and...
In the last fifteen years foreign banks have expanded their presence significantly in almost all dev...
There have been wide‐ranging discussions on whether the investments of foreign banks into the bankin...
The widespread presence of foreign banks in Central and Eastern Europe (CEE) was seen as a potential...
Since the Fall of the Wall in 1989, large international banks have been opening branches in former E...
This paper analyzes the evolution in bank performance following the removal of legal restrictions on...
This paper analyzes the development of the banking sector in European transition countries. We find ...
We model the efficiency of domestic and foreign banks in Central and Eastern Europe, in terms of eco...
In the three fast track, Central European transition countries, Hungary, Poland and the Czech Republ...
This research project undertook a combined quantitative and qualitative analysis of the foreign entr...
2008 This Working Paper should not be reported as representing the views of the IMF. The views expre...
In the last fifteen years foreign banks have expanded their presence significantly in almost all dev...
This article analyses the implications of the recently observed sharp expansion of foreign banks in ...
The countries in Central and Eastern Europe (CEE) that arenegotiating their entry into the European ...
SIGLEAvailable from Bibliothek des Instituts fuer Weltwirtschaft, ZBW, Duesternbrook Weg 120, D-2410...
Using a newly developed database for 8 transition economies, this paper examines whether reforms and...
In the last fifteen years foreign banks have expanded their presence significantly in almost all dev...
There have been wide‐ranging discussions on whether the investments of foreign banks into the bankin...
The widespread presence of foreign banks in Central and Eastern Europe (CEE) was seen as a potential...
Since the Fall of the Wall in 1989, large international banks have been opening branches in former E...
This paper analyzes the evolution in bank performance following the removal of legal restrictions on...
This paper analyzes the development of the banking sector in European transition countries. We find ...
We model the efficiency of domestic and foreign banks in Central and Eastern Europe, in terms of eco...
In the three fast track, Central European transition countries, Hungary, Poland and the Czech Republ...
This research project undertook a combined quantitative and qualitative analysis of the foreign entr...
2008 This Working Paper should not be reported as representing the views of the IMF. The views expre...