Does geographic expansion of banks increase, decrease or have no impact on their funding cost?

Does geographic expansion of banks increase, decrease or have no impact on their funding cost?

by Ross Levine

 

It is crucial to understand the impact of the geographic diversification of a bank’s assets on its funding costs because (1) the costs to banks of raising capital, issuing other securities, and attracting deposits affect the allocation and pricing of bank credit, which are central to economic growth and the distribution of income and (2) banks expand geographically for many reasons, raising questions about the impact of such expansions on funding costs and bank lending. Existing research, however, offers differing perspectives on whether the geographic diversification of bank branches and subsidiaries increases, decreases, or has no effect on the costs to banks of raising deposits and issuing securities. This research will provide the first empirical evaluation of the impact of geographic expansion on the costs of a bank’s interest-bearing liabilities, which account for about 90 percent of bank liabilities. A crucial methodological contribution is the development of an empirical strategy to identify the impact of an exogenous source of variation in the geographic expansion of a bank on its funding costs.

The Productivity Effects of Joining Multinational Supply Chains

The Productivity Effects of Joining Multinational Supply Chains

by Isabela Manelici and Jose-P. Vasquez

” Can local firms boost their productivity by supplying to multinational firms (MNCs)? The answer to this question has, so far, proven elusive. We make progress by using an administrative dataset that records all firm-to-firm transactions within Costa Rica.

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Development

Initiatives

International Trade & Development

Financial Intermediation in International Macroeconomics

Financial Intermediation in International Macroeconomics

by Emily Eisner

This project aims to understand the role of value-at-risk (VaR) constraints and bank risk-taking behavior in determining entry and exit into global asset markets. The model informs the aggregate risk of the global financial markets and informs macroeconomic dynamics that depend on financial frictions in intermediation. The project develops an open economy model of financial markets based on the closed economy model in Coimbra and Rey (2017). In the extended model, financial intermediaries, which are heterogeneous in their VaR constraint as in Coimbra and Rey (2017), have an opportunity to invest in foreign assets. The model predicts the risk-taking composition and international asset composition of financial intermediaries under different interest rate environments.

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Initiatives

Firm Sorting, Endogenous Competition and Productivity in Developing Countries

Firm Sorting, Endogenous Competition and Productivity in Developing Countries

by Roman Zarate

The goal of this project is to study how competition and firm market power shape the productivity distribution and the way that firms locate into space. In particular, low productive firms sort into places in which they exert more market power, while high productive firms sort into locations in which it is easier for customers (workers) to substitute among suppliers (employers) facing more competition. This mechanism is relevant in the context of developing countries in which a large number of small, unproductive firms coexist with productive firms. My primary hypothesis is that since in developing countries it is hard to commute, firms exert more labor market power generating two effects. On the one hand, low productive firms survive, and on the other, productive firms don’t expand in some locations. To test this hypothesis, I would use the economic censuses in Mexico and assess the productivity and pro-competitive effects in the labor market of transport projects designed to move people within cities.

Topics

Development

Initiatives

International Trade & Development