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Why so high? : understanding interest rate spreads in Latin America / Philip Brock and Liliana Rojas-Suárez, editors.

Colaborador(es): Tipo de material: TextoTextoIdioma: Inglés Detalles de publicación: Washington, DC : Inter-American Development Bank, 2000.Descripción: [6], 277 páginas : ilustraciones, gráficas, tablas a blanco y negro ; 23 cmISBN:
  • 1886938741
Tema(s): Clasificación LoC:
  • HG 1623 .L29 .W59 2000
Contenidos:
Preface, v -- Chapter 1. Interest rate spreads in Latin America: Facts, theories, and policy recommendations, 1 -- Chapter 2. Spreads in the Argentine financial system, 39 -- Chapter 3. Determinants of Bank Spreads in Bolivia, 67 -- Chapter 5. Structural Reform and Bank Spreads in the Colombian Banking System, 153 -- Chapter 6. The determinants of Bank interest rate margins in Mexico's postprivatization period (1992-95), 181 -- Chapter 7. Trends in Peruvian Bank Spread, 1991-96, 211 -- Chapter 8. Uruguay's spreads explained, 253.
Resumen: Financial liberalization has not lived up to expectations, at least as far as interest rate spreads are concerned. Over the past decade, many countries in Latin America and the Caribbean have reformed their financial sectors and reaped major economic benefits as a result. However, the persistence of high interest rate spreads - the difference between the interest charged to borrowers and the rate paid to depositors - has been a disquieting outcome of the reforms. Why So High? presents the first systematic analysis of the micro-and macroeconomic determinants of bank spreads across countries in Latin America. What has been the trend in bank spreads during the 1990s and how has financial liberalization contributed to this trend? How well do competing theories of interest rate spreads in industrial countries perform when applied to Latin America? What can policymakers do to promote the convergence of interest rate spreads to international levels? These are important questions addressed by this book.
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Monografía - Colección General SUCURSAL JUAN PABLO DUARTE Estantería HG 1623 .L29 .W59 2000 (Navegar estantería(Abre debajo)) Disponible 1038605

Preface, v -- Chapter 1. Interest rate spreads in Latin America: Facts, theories, and policy recommendations, 1 -- Chapter 2. Spreads in the Argentine financial system, 39 -- Chapter 3. Determinants of Bank Spreads in Bolivia, 67 -- Chapter 5. Structural Reform and Bank Spreads in the Colombian Banking System, 153 -- Chapter 6. The determinants of Bank interest rate margins in Mexico's postprivatization period (1992-95), 181 -- Chapter 7. Trends in Peruvian Bank Spread, 1991-96, 211 -- Chapter 8. Uruguay's spreads explained, 253.

Financial liberalization has not lived up to expectations, at least as far as interest rate spreads are concerned. Over the past decade, many countries in Latin America and the Caribbean have reformed their financial sectors and reaped major economic benefits as a result. However, the persistence of high interest rate spreads - the difference between the interest charged to borrowers and the rate paid to depositors - has been a disquieting outcome of the reforms. Why So High? presents the first systematic analysis of the micro-and macroeconomic determinants of bank spreads across countries in Latin America. What has been the trend in bank spreads during the 1990s and how has financial liberalization contributed to this trend? How well do competing theories of interest rate spreads in industrial countries perform when applied to Latin America? What can policymakers do to promote the convergence of interest rate spreads to international levels? These are important questions addressed by this book.

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