Foreign Entry And The Mexican Banking System, 1997-2007
Source: Harvard Business School
The Mexican banking system provides a quasi-experiment to address this question because in 1997 the Mexican government radically changed the laws governing the foreign ownership of banks: the foreign market share therefore increased five-fold between 1997 and 2007. The author constructs and analyzes a panel of Mexican bank financial data covering this period and find no evidence that foreign entry increases the availability of credit. They also find that switching from domestic to foreign ownership is associated with a decrease in non-performing loans and an increase in interest rate spreads, suggesting that foreign concerns bought domestic banks that had been making loans with low interest rates to parties that had a low probability of repayment.
| Format: | Size: | 537.04 | |
| Date: | Jun 2010 |



