所属栏目:银行与金融机构

Legal Origin, Creditor Protection and Bank Lending: Evidence from Emerging Markets
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发布日期:2009年04月22日 上次修订日期:2009年04月22日

摘要

Numerous papers in the “law and finance” literature have established that countries with better functioning legal institutions enjoy better developed capital markets, and that legal origin is a fundamental determinant of legal institutions (La Porta et al. 1997, 1998, 2006; Djankov et al. 2007). In this study, we test whether banks are willing to grant more credit to the private sector when they enjoy superior legal protection. We test this hypothesis using bank-level data from 45 emerging-market countries and a random-effects model that controls for bank heterogeneity. We find that lenders allocate a significantly higher portion of their assets to loans (i) where they enjoy English legal origin rather than French or Socialist legal origin; (ii) where enforcement of debt contracts is more efficient and (iii) where banks enjoy fewer restrictions on their operations. These support our hypothesis that superior legal protection leads to more bank credit, which, in turn, should lead to higher economic growth.
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Rebel A. Cole; Rima A. Turk Legal Origin, Creditor Protection and Bank Lending: Evidence from Emerging Markets (2009年04月22日) https://www.cfrn.com.cn/lw/12497.html

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