Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-fbnjt Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-15T09:46:07.013Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Effects of Government Interventions in the Financial Sector on Banking Competition and the Evolution of Zombie Banks

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 November 2016

Abstract

We investigate how government interventions such as blanket guarantees, liquidity support, recapitalizations, and nationalizations affect banking competition. These issues are critical for stability, access to finance, and economic growth. Exploiting cross-country and cross-time variation in the timing of interventions and accounting for their nonrandomness, we document that liquidity support, recapitalizations, and nationalizations trigger large increases in competition. We also find some more nuanced evidence that zombie banks’ market shares in crisis countries evolve together with interventions. A higher frequency of interventions coincides with greater zombie bank presence, and increases in competition are larger when zombie banks occupy bigger market shares.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Michael G. Foster School of Business, University of Washington 2016 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Acharya, V. V., and Kulkarni, N.. “State Ownership and Systemic Risk: Evidence from the Indian Financial Sector during 2007–09.” Working Paper, New York University (2013).Google Scholar
Acharya, V. V., and Yorulmazer, T.. “Too Many to Fail—An Analysis of Time-Inconsistency in Bank Closure Policies.” Journal of Financial Intermediation, 16 (2007), 131.Google Scholar
Aghion, P.; Bolton, P.; and Fries, S.. “Optimal Design of Bank Bailouts: The Case of Transition Economies.” Journal of Institutional and Theoretical Economics, 155 (1999), 5170.Google Scholar
Allen, F.; Carletti, E.; and Marquez, R.. “Credit Market Competition and Capital Regulation.” Review of Financial Studies, 24 (2011), 9831018.Google Scholar
Anginer, D.; Demirgüç-Kunt, A.; and Zhu, M.. “How Does Competition Affect Bank Systemic Risk?Journal of Financial Intermediation, 23 (2014), 126.Google Scholar
Barth, J. R.; Caprio, G.; and Levine, R.. “The Regulation and Supervision of Banks around the World—A New Database.” World Bank Policy Research Working Paper No. 2588 (2001).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Barth, J. R.; Caprio, G.; and Levine, R.. “Bank Regulation and Supervision: What Works Best?Journal of Financial Intermediation, 13 (2004), 205248.Google Scholar
Bayazitova, D., and Shivdasani, A.. “Assessing TARP.” Review of Financial Studies, 25 (2012), 377407.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Beck, T.; Clarke, G.; Groff, A.; Keefer, P.; and Walsh, P.. “New Tools in Comparative Political Economy: The Database of Political Institutions.” World Bank Economic Review, 15 (2001), 165I76.Google Scholar
Berger, A. N., and Bouwman, C. H. S.. “How Does Capital Affect Bank Performance during Financial Crises?Journal of Financial Economics, 109 (2013), 146176.Google Scholar
Bernanke, B. S., and Blinder, A. S.. “The Federal Funds Rate and the Channels of Monetary Transmission.” American Economic Review, 82 (1992), 901921.Google Scholar
Black, L., and Hazelwood, L.. “The Effect of TARP on Bank Risk-Taking.” Journal of Financial Stability, 9 (2013), 790803.Google Scholar
Bortolotti, B., and Faccio, M.. “Government Control of Privatized Firms.” Review of Financial Studies, 22 (2009), 29072939.Google Scholar
Brander, J. A., and Lewis, T. R.. “Oligopoly and Financial Structure: The Limited Liability Effect.” American Economic Review, 76 (1986), 956970.Google Scholar
Brown, C. O., and Dinc, S. I.. “The Politics of Bank Failures: Evidence from Emerging Markets.” Quarterly Journal of Economics, 120 (2005), 14131444.Google Scholar
Chevalier, J. A.Capital Structure and Product-Market Competition: Empirical Evidence from the Supermarket Industry.” American Economic Review, 85 (1995), 415435.Google Scholar
Claessens, S.The Financial Crisis and Financial Nationalism.” In Effective Crisis Response and Openness: Implications for the Trading System, Evenett, S. J., Hoekman, B. M., and Cattaneo, O., eds. Washington, DC: CEPR (2009a).Google Scholar
Claessens, S.“Competition in the Financial Sector: Overview of Competition Policies.” International Monetary Fund Working Paper WP/09/45 (2009b).Google Scholar
Claessens, S., and Laeven, L.. “What Drives Bank Competition? Some International Evidence.” Journal of Money, Credit and Banking, 36 (2004), 563583.Google Scholar
Claessens, S., and Laeven, L.. “Financial Dependence, Banking Sector Competition, and Economic Growth.” Journal of the European Economic Association, 3 (2005), 179207.Google Scholar
Cordella, T., and Yeyati, E. L.. “Bank Bailouts: Moral Hazard vs. Value Effect.” Journal of Financial Intermediation, 12 (2003), 300330.Google Scholar
Cox, D.Regression Models and Life Tables.” Journal of the Royal Statistical Society B, 34 (1972), 187220.Google Scholar
Dam, L., and Koetter, M.. “Bank Bailouts and Moral Hazard: Empirical Evidence from Germany.” Review of Financial Studies, 25 (2012), 23432380.Google Scholar
Demirgüç-Kunt, A., and Detragiache, E.. “The Determinants of Banking Crises in Developing and Developed Countries.” IMF Staff Papers, 45 (1998), 81109.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Diamond, D., and Rajan, R.. “Liquidity Shortages and Banking Crises.” Journal of Finance, 60 (2005), 615647.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Duchin, R., and Sosyura, D.. “Safer Ratios, Riskier Portfolios: Banks’ Response to Government Aid.” Journal of Financial Economics, 113 (2014), 128.Google Scholar
Dwyer, J., and Hasan, I.. “Suspension of Payments, Bank Failures, and the Nonbank Public’s Losses.” Journal of Monetary Economics, 54 (2007), 565580.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
European Commission. “The Return to Viability and the Assessment of Restructuring Measures in the Financial Sector in the Current Crisis under State Aid Rules.” Communication from the Commission No. 2009 /C 195/04, July 2, Brussels (2009).Google Scholar
Final Report of the Congressional Oversight Panel. Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office (2011).Google Scholar
Flannery, M. J.; Kwan, S. H.; and Nimalendran, M.. “The 2007–2009 Financial Crisis and Bank Opaqueness.” Journal of Financial Intermediation, 22 (2013), 5584.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Freixas, X.“Optimal Bail Out Policy, Conditionality and Constructive Ambiguity.” Working Paper, Unversitat Pompeu Fabra (1999).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Garrett, G., and Lange, P.. “Political Responses to Interdependence: What’s ‘Left’ for the Left?International Organization, 45 (1991), 539564.Google Scholar
Giannetti, M., and Simonov, A.. “On the Real Effects of Bank Bailouts: Micro-Evidence from Japan.” American Economic Journal: Macroeconomics, 5 (2013), 135167.Google Scholar
Gorton, G., and Huang, L.. “Liquidity, Efficiency, and Bank Bailouts.” American Economic Review, 94 (2004), 455483.Google Scholar
Gropp, R.; Gruendl, C.; and Guettler, A.. “The Impact of Public Guarantees on Bank Risk Taking: Evidence from a Natural Experiment.” Review of Finance, 18 (2014), 457488.Google Scholar
Gropp, R.; Hakenes, H.; and Schnabel, I.. “Competition, Risk-Shifting, and Public Bail-Out Policies.” Review of Financial Studies, 24 (2011), 20842120.Google Scholar
Hakenes, H., and Schnabel, I.. “Banks without Parachutes: Competitive Effects of Government Bail-Out Policies.” Journal of Financial Stability, 6 (2010), 156168.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hansen, L. P.Large Sample Properties of Generalized Method of Moments Estimators.” Econometrica, 50 (1982), 10291054.Google Scholar
Heckman, J.Sample Selection Bias as a Specification Error.” Econometrica, 47 (1979), 153161.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hoshi, T., and Kashyap, A. K.. “Will the U.S. Bank Recapitalization Succeed? Eight Lessons from Japan.” Journal of Financial Economics, 97 (2010), 398417.Google Scholar
Jimenez, G.; Ongena, S.; Peydro, J. L.; and Saurina, J.. “Hazardous Times for Monetary Policy: What Do Twenty-Three Million Loans Say about the Impact of Monetary Policy on Credit Risk-Taking?Econometrica, 82 (2014), 463505.Google Scholar
Kane, E. J.Principal-Agent Problems in S & L Salvage.” Journal of Finance, 3 (1990), 755764.Google Scholar
Kane, E. J., and Klingebiel, D.. “Alternatives to Blanket Guarantees for Containing a Systemic Crisis.” Journal of Financial Stability, 1 (2004), 3163.Google Scholar
Kashyap, A. K., and Stein, J. C.. “What Do a Million Observations on Banks Say about the Transmission of Monetary Policy?American Economic Review, 90 (2000), 407428.Google Scholar
Kaufmann, D.; Kraay, A.; and Mastruzzi, M.. “Governance Matters: Aggregate and Individual Governance Indicators 1996–2008.” World Bank Policy Research Department Working Paper No. 4978 (2009).Google Scholar
Keeley, M. C.Deposit Insurance, Risk, and Market Power in Banking.” American Economic Review, 80 (1990), 11831200.Google Scholar
Kleibergen, F., and Paap, R.. “Generalized Reduced Rank Tests Using the Singular Value Decomposition.” Journal of Econometrics, 127 (2006), 97126.Google Scholar
Koetter, M.; Kolari, J. W.; and Spierdijk, L.. “Enjoying the Quiet Life under Deregulation? Evidence from Adjusted Lerner Indices for U.S. Banks.” Review of Economics and Statistics, 94 (2012), 462–480.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kroszner, R. S., and Strahan, P. E.. “Regulatory Incentives and the Thrift Crisis: Dividends, Mutual-to-Stock Conversions, and Financial Distress.” Journal of Finance, 51 (1996), 12851319.Google Scholar
Laeven, L., and Valencia, F.. “Resolution of Banking Crises: The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly.” International Monetary Fund Working Paper 10/146 (2010).Google Scholar
Laeven, L., and Valencia, F.. “The Use of Blanket Guarantees in Banking Crises.” Journal of International Money and Finance, 31 (2012), 12201248.Google Scholar
Laeven, L., and Valencia, F.. “Systemic Banking Crises Database.” IMF Economic Review, 61 (2013), 225270.Google Scholar
Landier, A.; Sraer, D.; and Thesmar, D.. “Banks’ Exposure to Interest Rate Risk and the Transmission of Monetary Policy.” NBER Working Paper No. 18857 (2013).Google Scholar
Lemmon, M., and Roberts, M. R.. “The Response of Corporate Financing and Investment to Changes in the Supply of Credit.” Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis, 45 (2010), 555587.Google Scholar
Lyandres, E.Capital Structure and Interaction among Firms in Output Markets: Theory and Evidence.” Journal of Business, 79 (2006), 23812421.Google Scholar
Mills, J. P.Table of the Ratio: Area to Bounding Ordinate, for Any Portion of Normal Curve.” Biometrika, 18 (1926), 395400.Google Scholar
Norden, L.; Roosenboom, P.; and Wang, T.. “The Impact of Government Intervention in Banks on Corporate Borrowers’ Stock Returns.” Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis, 48 (2013), 16351662.Google Scholar
Panzar, J., and Rosse, J.. “Testing for ‘Monopoly’ Equilibrium.” Journal of Industrial Economics, 35 (1987), 443456.Google Scholar
Reinhart, C. M., and Rogoff, K.. “The Aftermath of Financial Crises.” American Economic Review, 99 (2009), 466472.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Richardson, G., and Troost, W.. “Monetary Intervention Mitigated Banking Panics during the Great Depression: Quasi-Experimental Evidence from a Federal Reserve District Border, 1929–1933.” Journal of Political Economy, 117 (2009), 10311073.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sapienza, P.The Effects of Government Ownership on Bank Lending.” Journal of Financial Economics, 72 (2004), 357384.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stock, J., and Yogo, M.. “Testing for Weak Instruments in Linear IV Regression.” In Identification and Inference for Econometric Models: Essays in Honor of Thomas Rothenberg, Andrews, D. W. K. and Stock, J. H., eds. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press (2005), 80108.Google Scholar
Supplementary material: File

Calderon and Schaeck supplementary material

Calderon and Schaeck supplementary material 1

Download Calderon and Schaeck supplementary material(File)
File 155.4 KB