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How does corruption undermine banking stability? A threshold nonlinear framework

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submitted on 2023-10-10, 07:37 and posted on 2023-10-10, 07:57 authored by Mohamed Sami Ben Ali, Fredj Fhima, Ridha Nouira

This study assesses the effect of corruption on the occurrence of banking crises for a sample of 38 countries over the period 2000–2017. We consider both the direct and the indirect channels through which corruption might affect the occurrence of banking crises. We also check, using a threshold regression approach, for the existence of a corruption threshold driving a regime switching in our sample countries for both high-income and low-income countries. Estimation outcomes suggest that; overall, corruption increases the probability of banking crises. The indirect effect estimation suggests that corruption negatively affects the banks’ lending through excessive risk rather than through their profitability. The panel threshold analysis provides evidence of a nonlinear corruption-banking stability relationship with the existence of two corruption-banking stability regimes. The study also provides evidence that corruption matters more for low-income than for high-income countries with regard to their banking system stability.

Other Information

Published in: Journal of Behavioral and Experimental Finance
License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
See article on publisher's website: https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jbef.2020.100365

Funding

Open Access funding provided by the Qatar National Library

History

Language

  • English

Publisher

Elsevier

Publication Year

  • 2020

License statement

This Item is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License

Institution affiliated with

  • Qatar University
  • College of Business and Economics - QU

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