Does Government Intervention Affect Banking Globalization?

Working Paper: CEPR ID: DP11108

Authors: Anya Kleymenova; Andrew K. Rose; Tomasz Wieladek

Abstract: Using data from British and American banks, we provide empirical evidence that government intervention affects banking globalization along three dimensions: depth, breadth and persistence. We examine depth by studying whether a bank’s preference for domestic, as opposed to external, lending (funding) changes when it is subjected to a large public intervention, such as bank nationalization. Our results suggest that, following nationalization, non-British banks allocate their lending away from the UK and increase their external funding. Second, we find that nationalized banks from the same country tend to have portfolios of foreign assets that are spread across countries in a way that is far more similar than either private banks from the same country or nationalized banks from different countries, consistent with an impact on the breadth of globalization. Third, we study the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP) to examine the persistence of the effect of large government interventions. We find weak evidence that upon entry into the TARP, foreign lending declines but domestic does not. This effect is observable at the aggregate level, and seems to disappear upon TARP exit. Collectively, this evidence suggests that large government interventions affect the depth and breadth of banking globalization, but may not persist after public interventions are unwound.

Keywords: bank; data; domestic; effect; empirical; foreign; liability; nationalization; panel; TARP

JEL Codes: F36; G28


Causal Claims Network Graph

Edges that are evidenced by causal inference methods are in orange, and the rest are in light blue.


Causal Claims

CauseEffect
Nationalization (H13)Reduction in lending to the UK (G21)
Nationalization (H13)Increase in external funding (O36)
Nationalization from same country (H13)Convergence of foreign asset portfolios (G15)
TARP entry (E43)Decline in foreign lending (F65)
TARP exit (G28)Disappearance of effects (C22)

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