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Banking reform and financial sector development in Central and Eastern Europe and EU Accession Countries

Konferenční objektopen accesspublished
dc.contributor.authorHagmayr, Bettina
dc.contributor.authorHaiss, Peter
dc.date.accessioned2009-11-25T15:22:24Z
dc.date.available2009-11-25T15:22:24Z
dc.date.issued2006
dc.description.abstractFrom the empirical evidence on the finance-growth-nexus in European transition countries, we conclude that financial sector reform, especially of the banking sector, can contribute to economic growth and speed up transition. Empirical research by Cottarelli, Dell´Arriccia and Vladkova-Hollar (2005) and others has provided evidence that factors originating in the banking system, rather than the corporate sector, were responsible for growth differences in accession and transition economies. In extending the conventional finance-growth framework and based on observations in New EU-Member States (NMS), we suggest that strong foreign bank investment and related cross-border credit from parent banks may have been a substitute for domestic bank growth and thus in supporting real sector growth in South-Eastern Europe (SEE). Given the massive-scale involvement of foreign banks in NMS and SEE, more research is necessary in this area. In SEE countries, economic and bank transition started later than in NMS because of political circumstances. As evident from the experience in NMS, financial development is not growthsupportive when the institutional and legal framework given to market participants is not appropriate. Unsound banking intermediation has a direct impact on economic growth as such behaviour perpetuates economic stagnation and inefficient use of resources. Unsound financial sectors in SEE also indirectly hamper economic growth, as they pose serious obstacles to inflows of foreign direct investment which in turn would contribute to economic growth. When financial institutions are subject to poor governance and incentive structures, finance can hardly promote growth. Instead of supporting growth, granting bad loans back to companies of their owners, for example, leads to resource misallocation, reduced private sector confidence and results in lower investment and growth. Policies thus should continue to focus on alleviating the bottlenecks to financial intermediation by guaranteeing stable macroeconomic conditions and a sound institutional legal and supervisory environment. The involvement of foreign banks is found to be a major factor for stabilizing the banking sector and making it fit to support economic growth.eng
dc.eventVeřejná správa 2006 (září 2006, Seč u Chrudimi, Česko)cze
dc.formats. 122-127cze
dc.formatp. 122-127eng
dc.format.mimetypeapplication/pdfeng
dc.identifier.isbn80-7194-882-9
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/10195/35121
dc.language.isoeng
dc.publicationstatuspublishedeng
dc.publisherUniverzita Pardubicecze
dc.rightsbez omezenícze
dc.subjectbanking reformeng
dc.subjectfinancial sectoreng
dc.subjecteconomic growtheng
dc.subjecttransition countrieseng
dc.subjectaccession countrieseng
dc.titleBanking reform and financial sector development in Central and Eastern Europe and EU Accession Countrieseng
dc.typeConferenceObjecteng
dspace.entity.typePublication

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