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Financial Intermediary Distress in the Republic of Korea / Giovanni Ferri, Paola Bongini, SooTae Kang.

World Bank Open Knowledge Repository (formerly "World Bank E-Library Publications") Available online

World Bank Open Knowledge Repository (formerly "World Bank E-Library Publications")
Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Ferri, Giovanni, author.
Kang, SooTae, author.
Bongini, Paola, author.
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Banks and banking.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (42 pages)
Place of Publication:
Washington, DC : World Bank, 1999.
Summary:
May 2000 - During a systemic financial crisis in Korea, the probability of financial distress was greater for large financial intermediaries (such as commercial banks and merchant banking corporations) than it was for tiny mutual savings and finance companies. Taking the Korean experience as a laboratory experiment in systemic financial crisis, Bongini, Ferri, and Kang analyze distress in individual institutions among two groups of financial intermediaries. They pool together a group of large financial intermediaries (commercial banks, merchant banking corporations) and another group of tiny mutual savings and finance companies. Both the too-big-to-fail doctrine and the credit channel approach suggest that the probability of distress would be greater for small intermediaries. But Bongini, Ferri, and Kang find that proportionately fewer small intermediaries were distressed than were large intermediaries. They offer two hypothetical explanations for this unexpected result: · Exchange rate exposure - a major shock to Korean intermediaries - was presumably negligible for the small financial intermediaries. · Small financial intermediaries allocated loans better, because of the peer monitoring natural to their mutual nature and deep local roots. Available data did not allow the authors to test the first hypothesis, but they did find support for the second one. Estimating a logit model, they find that the probability of distress was systematically smaller for the mutual savings and finance companies that stayed closer to their origins (for example, collecting many deposits as credit mutual installment savings) and for those with a longer history of doing business in their local community. This paper - a product of Finance, Development Research Group - is part of a larger effort in the group to study the financial crises in East Asia. The authors may be contacted at pbongini@mi.unicatt.it, gferri@worldbank.orgor tkang@worldbank.org.
Notes:
Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Publisher Number:
10.1596/1813-9450-2332

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