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Bank Competition, Crisis and Risk-Taking: Evidence from Emerging Markets in AsiaWahyoe SoedarmonoWorld Bank Fouad MachrouhInstitut supérieur de commerce et d'administration des entreprises Amine TaraziUniversite de Limoges, LAPE October 2, 2012 Abstract: This paper investigates the impact on financial stability of bank competition in emerging markets by taking into account crisis periods. Based on a broad set of commercial banks in Asia over the 1994-2009 period, the empirical results indicate that a higher degree of market power in the banking market is associated with higher capital ratios, higher income volatility and higher insolvency risk of banks. In general, although banks in less competitive markets hold more capital, the levels of capitalization are not high enough to offset the impact on default risk of higher risk taking. Nevertheless, during crisis periods, specifically the 1997 Asian crisis that has directly affected Asian banks, market power in banking has a stabilizing impact. A closer investigation however shows that such findings only hold for countries with a smaller size of the largest banks, suggesting that the impact of bank competition is conditional on the extent to which the banking industry may benefit from too-big-to-fail subsidies. Overall, this paper has policy implications for bank consolidation policies and the role of the lender of last resort.
Number of Pages in PDF File: 46 Keywords: bank competition, moral hazard, financial crisis, Asia JEL Classification: G21, G28 working papers seriesDate posted: July 3, 2010 ; Last revised: October 5, 2012Suggested CitationContact Information
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