Monetary and Financial Integration in the EMU: Push or Pull?
This paper examines the channels through which monetary union increased financial integration, using panel data on bilateral international commercial bank claims from 1998-2006. I decompose the increase in claims into three channels: a "borrower effect," as a country's EMU membership may leave its borrowers more creditworthy in the eyes of foreign lenders; a "creditor effect," as membership in a monetary union may increase the attractiveness of a nation's commercial banks as intermediaries, perhaps through increased scale economies or through an improved regulatory environment after the advent of monetary union; and a "pairwise effect," as joint membership in a monetary union increases the quality of intermediation between borrowers and creditors when both are in the union. Isolating these three channels through a series of difference-in-differences specifications, I find that the pairwise effect is the primary source of increased financial integration. This result is robust to a number of sensitivity exercises. Copyright Published 2009. This article is a US Government work and is in the public domain in the USA.
Year of publication: |
2009
|
---|---|
Authors: | Spiegel, Mark M. |
Published in: |
Review of International Economics. - Wiley Blackwell, ISSN 0965-7576. - Vol. 17.2009, 4, p. 751-776
|
Publisher: |
Wiley Blackwell |
Saved in:
freely available
Saved in favorites
Similar items by person
-
North-South Customs Unions and International Capital Mobility
Fernández-Arias, Eduardo, (1997)
-
Spiegel, Mark M., (2018)
-
Determinants of Voluntary Bank Disclosure: Evidence from Japanese Shinkin Banks
Spiegel, Mark M., (2004)
- More ...