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The Lending Channel in Emerging Economies: Are Foreign Banks Different?

Vázquez, Francisco, Carmen M. Reinhart () and Marco Arena

No 07/48, IMF Working Papers from International Monetary Fund

Abstract: This paper exploits a panel dataset comprising 1,565 banks in 20 emerging countries during 1989- 2001 and compares the response of the volume of loans and the rates on loans and deposits to various measures of monetary conditions across domestic and foreign banks. It also looks for systematic differences in the behavior of domestic and foreign banks during periods of financial distress and tranquil times. Using differences in bank ownership as a proxy for financial constraints, the paper finds weak evidence that foreign banks have a lower sensitivity of credit to monetary conditions relative to their domestic competitors, with the differences driven by banks with lower asset liquidity and/or capitalization. The lending and deposit rates of foreign banks tend to be smoother during periods of financial distress. However, the differences across domestic and foreign banks do not appear to be strong. These results provide weak support to the existence of supply-side effects in credit markets and suggest that foreign bank entry in emerging countries may have contributed somewhat to stability in credit markets.

Keywords: Banking; Emerging markets (search for similar items in EconPapers)
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-ban and nep-mon
Date: 2007-03-01
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Working Paper: The Lending Channel in Emerging Economics: Are Foreign Banks Different? (2006) Downloads
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