Empirical Evidence
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 February 2020
Thus far in the book, we have described the substantial variation in banking crises, capital inflows, and financial market structure across the industrialized world in the post–Bretton Woods era, and we have argued that the destabilizing impact of capital inflows is conditional on the relative prominence of banks versus non-bank financial markets. When banks compete with well-developed national securities markets to provide financing for businesses, their appetite for risk increases. As we discussed in Chapter 2, securities markets can incentivize even the most traditional commercial banks to take on more risks, even if those risks do not appear to be closely tied to securities markets. Capital inflows amplify this risk and increase the chance of a banking crisis. In contrast, when banks operate alongside relatively underdeveloped securities markets, they maintain their conservative bias and capital inflows are less likely to be destabilizing. Ultimately, it is the combination of foreign capital inflows and domestic financial market structure that tips the balance between banking stability and banking crises.
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