In the literature on systemic banking crises, two common themes are: (1) Risky lending often follows bank liberalization. (2) Lack of market discipline encourages risky lending. That not all liberalizations are followed by financial crisis and that financial systems without market discipline sometimes operate without incident invites examination of these themes. In a test of six countries, we find that our measure of bank risk increases significantly in the wake of financial liberalizations, but only where depositors fail to discipline banks. Our measures of market discipline and bank risk, however, are persistently inversely related
This paper explores the impact of market discipline on bank risk taking. We examine a broad sample o...
We examine the impact of various dimensions of financial liberalization on the likelihood of systemi...
A study of 53 countries during 1980-95 finds that financial liberalization increases the probability...
In the literature on systemic banking crises, two common themes are: (1) lack of market discipline e...
Due to principal-agency frictions, firms tend to engage in moral hazard behaviour. The banking indus...
This paper tests the effect of systemic risk on deposit market discipline by interacting proxies for...
The paper studies the empirical relationship between banking crises and financial liberalization in ...
Several studies indicate that financial liberalization contributes to the likelihood of a financial ...
What factors make countries vulnerable to banking crises? Particularly, how do reforms in regulatio...
This paper intends to study whether financial liberalization tends to increase the likelihood of sys...
Over the past three decades, leading industrial nations and many developing countries have deregulat...
We analyze a general equilibrium model in which financial institutions generate endogenoussystemic r...
Recent macroeconomic events have reinvigorated research in financial crises, namely systemic banking...
This study examines the relationship between financial liberalization and the advent probability of...
“Market discipline”—the theory that short-term creditors can efficiently rein in bank risk through t...
This paper explores the impact of market discipline on bank risk taking. We examine a broad sample o...
We examine the impact of various dimensions of financial liberalization on the likelihood of systemi...
A study of 53 countries during 1980-95 finds that financial liberalization increases the probability...
In the literature on systemic banking crises, two common themes are: (1) lack of market discipline e...
Due to principal-agency frictions, firms tend to engage in moral hazard behaviour. The banking indus...
This paper tests the effect of systemic risk on deposit market discipline by interacting proxies for...
The paper studies the empirical relationship between banking crises and financial liberalization in ...
Several studies indicate that financial liberalization contributes to the likelihood of a financial ...
What factors make countries vulnerable to banking crises? Particularly, how do reforms in regulatio...
This paper intends to study whether financial liberalization tends to increase the likelihood of sys...
Over the past three decades, leading industrial nations and many developing countries have deregulat...
We analyze a general equilibrium model in which financial institutions generate endogenoussystemic r...
Recent macroeconomic events have reinvigorated research in financial crises, namely systemic banking...
This study examines the relationship between financial liberalization and the advent probability of...
“Market discipline”—the theory that short-term creditors can efficiently rein in bank risk through t...
This paper explores the impact of market discipline on bank risk taking. We examine a broad sample o...
We examine the impact of various dimensions of financial liberalization on the likelihood of systemi...
A study of 53 countries during 1980-95 finds that financial liberalization increases the probability...