"Competition Among Banks: Good or Bad?"

Johann Wolfgang Goethe-Universität Frankfurt am Main, Germany
April 7-8, 2000

Click on the title to see the abstract. Click on the icon to download the entire paper. (You will need the free Acrobat Reader from Adobe).

#00-09
"Screening, Bidding and the Loan Market Tightness"
Melanie Cao and Shouyong Shi, Queen's University

#00-10
"Learning by Lending, Competition and Screening
Incentives in the Banking Industry"
Giovanni Dell'Ariccia, IMF Research Department

#00-12
"The Dynamics of Market Entry: The Effects of Mergers and Acquisitions on De Novo Entry and Small Business Lending in the Banking Industry"
Allen N. Berger, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System; Seth D. Bonime, Yale School of Management; Lawrence G. Goldberg, University of Miami; J. White, Stern School of Business, New York University

#00-13
"Relationship Banking and Competition under Differentiated Asymmetric Information"
Robert Hauswald, Kelley School of Business, Indiana University; Robert Marquez, Robert H. Smith School of Business, University of Maryland

#00-14
"Banking Relation, Competition and Research Incentives"
Thomas Gehrig, University of Freiburg

#00-15
"Interconnection and Rivalry between Banks"
John A.Weinberg, Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond

#00-16
"Don't Put All Your Eggs in One Basket? Diversification
and Specialization in Lending"
Andrew Winton, University of Minnesota

#00-17
"A Comparative Study of Efficiency in European Banking"
Barbara Casu and Philip Molyneux, School of Accounting, Banking and Economics, University of Wales

#00-18
"Competition, Growth and Performance in the Banking Industry"
Bert Scholtens, University of Groningen

#00-19
"Banking Market Structure, Financial Dependence and Growth: International Evidence from Industry Data"
Nicola Cetorelli and Michele Gambera, Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago

#00-20
"Bank Competition and Firm Creation"
Emilia Bonaccorsi di Patti and Giovanni Dell'Ariccia, Bank of Italy and IMF

#00-21
"Loanable Funds, Monitoring and Banking"
Huberto M. Ennis, Cornell University