VoxEU: Determinants of banking system fragility - A regional perspective

21 March 2012

This column looks at the effect of bank fragility and failure on other nearby countries, and outlines what can be done to mitigate the cross-border contagion.

It is well known that banks face shocks both on their asset and liability side. A shock that initially affects one institution can become systemic and infect the larger local economy. The globalisation of banking implies further that shocks affecting a particular bank or country can now affect not only the local real economy but also the financial system and real economy in other countries.

The current academic literature on financial fragility, however, has mainly focused on stability of individual banks or stability of individual countries’ banking systems, but has disregarded regional banking system fragility. This column describes the findings of a recent empirical study of the determinants of regional banking system fragility and considers liquidity, capitalisation, competition, diversification and presence of foreign banks in a region. These are motivated as follows:

Main findings:

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