TY - JOUR AU - Goldberg,Linda AU - Dages,B. Gerard AU - Kinney,Daniel TI - Foreign and Domestic Bank Participation in Emerging Markets: Lessons from Mexico and Argentina JF - National Bureau of Economic Research Working Paper Series VL - No. 7714 PY - 2000 Y2 - May 2000 UR - http://www.nber.org/papers/w7714 L1 - http://www.nber.org/papers/w7714.pdf N1 - Author contact info: Linda S. Goldberg Research Department, 3rd Floor Federal Reserve Bank-New York 33 Liberty Street New York, NY 10045 Tel: 212/720-2836 Fax: 212/720-6831 E-Mail: linda.goldberg@ny.frb.org AB - The Asian Crisis has highlighted the importance of strong domestic financial systems in overall economic development and stabilization. Less agreement is evident on the role of foreign banks in achieving this goal. We explore this issue by studying bank-specific data on lending by domestically- and foreign-owned banks in Argentina and Mexico. We find that foreign banks generally have had higher loan growth rates than their domestically-owned counterparts, with lower volatility of lending, contributing to lower overall volatility of credit. Additionally, in both countries, foreign banks show notable credit growth during crisis periods. In Argentina, the loan portfolios of foreign and domestic privately-owned banks are similar, and lending rates analogously respond to aggregate demand fluctuations. In Mexico, foreign and domestic banks with lower levels of impaired assets have similar loan responsiveness and portfolios. State-owned banks (Argentina) and banks with high levels of impaired assets (Mexico) have more stagnant loan growth and weak responsiveness to market signals. Overall, these findings suggest that bank health, and not ownership per se, is the critical element in the growth, volatility, and cyclicality of bank credit. Diversity in ownership appears to contribute to greater stability of credit in times of crisis and domestic financial system weakness. ER -