This paper examines the relationship between risk, concentration and the exercise of market power by banking institutions. We use monthly balance-sheet and interest rate data for the Colombian banking system from 1997 to 2006. The evidence shows that, in the face of high risk, banks transfer a larger share of risk to customers through higher intermediation margins. The result suggests that systemic risk acts as a “collusion” device for banks: while high concentration is not enough to have collusion, the true effects of high market concentration on interest rates’ mark-ups emerge when the system is under stress.
| Autores | Tovar, Jorge; Jaramillo, Christian; Hernández, Carlos |
| Palabras Clave | Banking, market power, risk, concentration, intermediation margins |
| Archivo | documentocede2007-27.pdf 408,44 kB |
| Año | 2007 |
| Mes | 11 |
| Numero | 2007-27 |