Publication | Open Access
The Invisible Hand of the Government: Moral Suasion during the European Sovereign Debt Crisis
133
Citations
33
References
2019
Year
Moral SuasionEuropean LawLawInternational Financial CrisisGovernment DebtInternational FinanceInvisible HandExternal DebtProprietary DataDomestic BanksSovereign DebtEconomicsStressed CountriesLoansBond MarketFinanceBusinessInternational DebtPolitical ScienceThird World DebtCorporate FinanceFinancial Crisis
Using proprietary data on banks’ monthly securities holdings, we show that during the European sovereign debt crisis, domestic banks in fiscally stressed countries were considerably more likely than foreign banks to increase their holdings of domestic sovereign bonds during months when the government needed to roll over a relatively large amount of maturing debt. This result cannot be explained by risk shifting, carry trading, or regulatory compliance. Domestic banks that received government support, are small, or with weaker balance sheets were particularly susceptible to “moral suasion,” while governance of banks played less of a role. (JEL D72, E62, G21, G28, H11, H63).
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