Banking on Politics: When Former High-ranking Politicians Become Bank Directors

New data are presented for a large number of countries on how frequently former high-ranking politicians become bank directors. Politician-banker connections at this level are relatively rare, but their frequency is robustly correlated with many important characteristics of banks and institutions. A...

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Veröffentlicht in:The World Bank economic review 2010-01, Vol.24 (2), p.234-279
Hauptverfasser: Braun, Matías, Raddatz, Claudio
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Raddatz, Claudio
description New data are presented for a large number of countries on how frequently former high-ranking politicians become bank directors. Politician-banker connections at this level are relatively rare, but their frequency is robustly correlated with many important characteristics of banks and institutions. At the micro level, banks that are politically connected are larger and more profitable than other banks, despite being less leveraged and having less risk. At the country level, this connectedness is strongly negatively related to economic development. Controlling for this, the analysis finds that the phenomenon is more prevalent where institutions are weaker and governments more powerful but less accountable. Bank regulation tends to be more pro-banker and the banking system less developed where connectedness is higher. A benign, public-interest view is hard to reconcile with these patterns.
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identifier ISSN: 0258-6770
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source PAIS Index; Oxford Journals Online; Jstor Complete Legacy; Alma/SFX Local Collection
subjects Bank assets
Bank earnings
Bank loans
Bank management
Bank operations
Bankers
Banking
Banking industry
Banking regulation
Banking sector development
Banks
Board of directors
Boards of directors
Correlation analysis
Economic development
Financial services
G15
G21
institutions
Managers
P16
Political economy
Politicians
Politics
Private banks
Public interest
Public sector
Studies
World Bank
title Banking on Politics: When Former High-ranking Politicians Become Bank Directors
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