Volume 13, Supplement 1 June 2017

International Banking and Cross-Border Effects of Regulation: Lessons from the United Kingdom

Abstract

This paper examines whether U.K.-owned banks' domestic lending is affected by prudential actions in other countries where the banks have exposures. We also examine the impact of a change in prudential policy in a foreign-owned U.K.- resident bank's home jurisdiction on its lending to the United Kingdom. Our results suggest that prudential actions taken abroad do not have significant spillover effects on bank lending in the U.K. economy as a whole. But there are more disaggregated sectoral effects: for instance, when a foreign authority tightens loan-to-value standards, U.K. affiliates of banks owned from that country expand their lending to U.K. households.

Authors

  • Robert Hills
  • Dennis Reinhardt
  • Rhiannon Sowerbutts
  • Tomasz Wieladek

JEL codes

  • F32
  • F34
  • G21

Other papers in this issue

Yusuf Soner Başkaya and Mahir Binici and Turalay Kenç

Jose M. Berrospide and Ricardo Correa and Linda S. Goldberg and Friederike Niepmann

Eugenio Cerutti and Ricardo Correa and Elisabetta Fiorentino and Esther Segalla

Matthieu Bussière and Julia Schmidt and Frédéric Vinas

Stefan Avdjiev and Cathérine Koch and Patrick McGuire and Goetz von Peter

Marianna Caccavaio and Luisa Carpinelli and Giuseppe Marinelli

Gabriel Levin-Konigsberg and Calixto López and Fabrizio López-Gallo and Serafín Martínez-Jaramillo