Financial Opening, Deposit Insurance, and Risk in a Model of Banking Competition [electronic resource] / Tito Cordella.

By: Cordella, TitoContributor(s): Levy Yeyati, EduardoMaterial type: TextTextSeries: IMF Working Papers; Working Paper ; No. 98/97Publication details: Washington, D.C. : International Monetary Fund, 1998Description: 1 online resource (45 p.)ISBN: 1451851995 :ISSN: 1018-5941Subject(s): Bank Competition | Banking | Banks | Deposit Insurance Scheme | Deposit Insurance | Deposit Rate | New ZealandAdditional physical formats: Print Version:: Financial Opening, Deposit Insurance, and Risk in a Model of Banking CompetitionOnline resources: IMF e-Library | IMF Book Store Abstract: This paper studies the impact of competition on the determination of interest rates and banks' risk-taking behavior under different assumptions about deposit insurance and the dissemination of financial information. It finds that lower entry costs foster competition in deposit rate sand reduce banks' incentives to limit risk exposure. Although higher insurance coverage amplifies this effect, two alternative arrangements (risk-based contributions to the insurance fund and public disclosure of financial information) help to reduce it. Moreover, uninsured but fully informed depositors and risk-based full deposit insurance yield the same equilibrium risk level, which is independent of entry costs. The welfare implications of the different arrangements are also explored.
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This paper studies the impact of competition on the determination of interest rates and banks' risk-taking behavior under different assumptions about deposit insurance and the dissemination of financial information. It finds that lower entry costs foster competition in deposit rate sand reduce banks' incentives to limit risk exposure. Although higher insurance coverage amplifies this effect, two alternative arrangements (risk-based contributions to the insurance fund and public disclosure of financial information) help to reduce it. Moreover, uninsured but fully informed depositors and risk-based full deposit insurance yield the same equilibrium risk level, which is independent of entry costs. The welfare implications of the different arrangements are also explored.

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