Openness, profit opportunities and foreign banking |
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Authors: | Luis G. Dopico James A. Wilcox |
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Affiliation: | 1. Heart Failure Research Group, Baker IDI Heart and Diabetes Institute, Melbourne, Australia;2. Department of Physiology, Monash University, Melbourne, Australia;3. Department of Medicine, Monash University, Melbourne Australia;4. Department of Cardiovascular Medicine, Alfred Hospital, Melbourne, Australia |
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Abstract: | Using new data from the World Bank and OCC surveys, we show correlations across a wide range of countries between foreign banking and domestic economic, financial and bank regulatory conditions. Foreign banking tended to be more prevalent in countries that were more open to foreign ownership of their banks, more open to banks’ engaging in a wider range of financial activities and more open to international trade. Restrictions on foreign ownership of domestic banks that were in place in the late 1970s reduced the current extent of foreign banking. Foreign banking was negatively correlated with current restrictions on banks’ securities, insurance and real estate activities. Countries that had more international trade tended to have more foreign banking. Foreign banking was more pervasive in countries where banking was more profitable and where the domestically-owned banking sector was smaller relative to GDP. |
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Keywords: | Foreign banking Foreign ownership Openness Bank profitability Liberalization |
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