The Impact of Funding Models and Foreign Bank Ownership on Bank Credit Growth : Is Central and Eastern Europe Different?

This paper provides new evidence on the factors affecting protracted credit contraction in the wake of the global financial crisis. The paper applies panel vector autoregressions to a global panel that consists of quarterly data for 41 countries for the period 2000-2011 and documents that domestic private credit growth is highly sensitive to cross-border funding shocks around the world. This relationship is significantly stronger in Central and Eastern Europe, a region with considerably stronger foreign presence, higher cross-border funding, and elevated loan-to-deposit ratios compared with the rest of the world. The paper shows that high foreign ownership per se does not appear to explain credit response differences to foreign funding shocks. Rather, there is a stronger response in countries that exhibit high loan-to-deposit ratios and a high reliance on foreign funding relative to local deposits. The results suggest that funding model differences were at the heart of the post-crisis credit contraction in several Central and Eastern European countries. These findings have important regulatory and supervisory implications for emerging countries in Central and Eastern Europe as well as for other countries.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Feyen, Erik, Letelier, Raquel, Love, Inessa, Maimbo, Samuel Munzele, Rocha, Roberto
Format: Policy Research Working Paper biblioteca
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2014-02
Subjects:ACCESS TO FINANCE, ACCESS TO FINANCIAL SERVICES, AFFILIATES, ASSETS, AUSTRIAN NATIONAL BANK, AUTOREGRESSION, BALANCE SHEET, BALANCE SHEETS, BANK CREDIT, BANK CREDIT GROWTH, BANK DEPOSITS, BANK LENDING, BANK LENDING BEHAVIOR, BANK LIABILITIES, BANK OWNERSHIP, BANK REGULATION, BANKING ASSETS, BANKING CRISIS, BANKING RESTRUCTURING, BANKING SECTOR, BANKING SYSTEM, BANKING SYSTEM ASSETS, BANKING SYSTEMS, BENCHMARK, BONDS, BORROWING, BORROWINGS, CAPITAL MARKETS, CAPITALIZATION, CENTRAL BANK, CENTRAL BANKS, CONTAGION, CREDIT ACCESS, CREDIT CRUNCH, CREDIT FLOWS, CREDIT GROWTH, CREDIT INFORMATION, CREDIT PROVISION, CROSS-BORDER BANKING, DEFLATORS, DEMAND FOR CREDIT, DEPENDENT, DEPOSIT, DEPOSIT BASE, DEPOSIT FUNDING, DEPOSIT GROWTH, DEPOSITORY, DEPOSITS, DEPOSITS ACCOUNT, DERIVATIVES, DEVELOPMENT POLICY, DOMESTIC BANK, DOMESTIC BANKING, DOMESTIC BANKS, DOMESTIC DEPOSIT, DOMESTIC DEPOSITS, ECONOMIC ACTIVITY, ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT, ECONOMIC GROWTH, ECONOMIC POLICY, ECONOMIC SHOCKS, EMERGING MARKET ECONOMIES, EMERGING MARKETS, ENDOGENOUS VARIABLES, EXCHANGE RATE, EXPORTS, FINANCIAL CRISES, FINANCIAL CRISIS, FINANCIAL DEVELOPMENT, FINANCIAL GLOBALIZATION, FINANCIAL INTEGRATION, FINANCIAL INTERMEDIATION, FINANCIAL MARKET, FINANCIAL MARKETS, FINANCIAL SECTOR, FINANCIAL SECTOR DEVELOPMENT, FINANCIAL SERVICES, FINANCIAL STABILITY, FINANCIAL SYSTEM, FINANCIAL SYSTEMS, FOREIGN BANK, FOREIGN BANKS, FOREIGN LIABILITIES, FOREIGN LIABILITY, FOREIGN OWNERSHIP, FUNDING SOURCE, FUNDING SOURCES, GDP, GDP DEFLATOR, GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT, GROWTH RATE, HOUSEHOLDS, INSTITUTIONAL FRAMEWORKS, INTEREST RATE, INTERNATIONAL BANK, INTERNATIONAL BANKING, INTERNATIONAL BANKS, INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL CRISES, INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL STATISTICS, LIABILITIES DEPOSITS, LIQUID ASSETS, LIQUIDITY, LIQUIDITY POSITION, LIQUIDITY SHOCK, LOAN, LOAN MARKET, LOAN-TO-DEPOSIT RATIO, LOAN-TO-DEPOSIT RATIOS, M1, MACROECONOMIC POLICIES, MARKET ECONOMIES, MORTGAGE, MULTINATIONAL, NATIONAL BANK, NATIONAL BANK OF SLOVAKIA, PRIVATE CREDIT, REAL GDP, REGULATORY AUTHORITIES, REGULATORY FRAMEWORK, REMITTANCES, RESTRUCTURING PROGRAMS, RISK FACTORS, RULE OF LAW, SAVINGS, SAVINGS DEPOSITS, SECURITIES, SOLVENCY, SUBSIDIARIES, SUBSIDIARY, SUPERVISION EQUITY, SUPPLY OF CREDIT, SURCHARGES, TERM CREDIT, UNION, WHOLESALE FUNDING,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2014/02/19007915/impact-funding-models-foreign-bank-ownership-bank-credit-growth-central-eastern-europe-different
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/17341
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