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Cross-border banking and business cycles in asymmetric currency unions
von Lena Dräger und Christian R. ProañoAgainst the background of the recent housing boom and bust in countries such as Spain and
Ireland, we investigate in this paper the macroeconomic consequences of cross-border banking in
monetary unions such as the euro area. For this purpose, we incorporate in an otherwise standard
two-region monetary union DSGE model a banking sector module along the lines of Gerali et al.
(2010), accounting for borrowing constraints of entrepreneurs and an internal constraint on the
bank’s leverage ratio. We illustrate in particular how different lending standards within the
monetary union can translate into destabilizing spill-over effects between the regions, which can
in turn result in a higher macroeconomic volatility. This mechanism is modeled by letting the loanto-
value (LTV) ratio that banks demand of entrepreneurs depend on either regional productivity
shocks or on the productivity shock from one dominating region. Thereby, we demonstrate a
channel through which the financial sector may have exacerbated the emergence of macroeconomic
imbalances within the euro area. Additionally, we show the effects of a monetary policy rule
augmented by the loan rate spread as in Cúrdia and Woodford (2010) in a two-country monetary
union context.
Ireland, we investigate in this paper the macroeconomic consequences of cross-border banking in
monetary unions such as the euro area. For this purpose, we incorporate in an otherwise standard
two-region monetary union DSGE model a banking sector module along the lines of Gerali et al.
(2010), accounting for borrowing constraints of entrepreneurs and an internal constraint on the
bank’s leverage ratio. We illustrate in particular how different lending standards within the
monetary union can translate into destabilizing spill-over effects between the regions, which can
in turn result in a higher macroeconomic volatility. This mechanism is modeled by letting the loanto-
value (LTV) ratio that banks demand of entrepreneurs depend on either regional productivity
shocks or on the productivity shock from one dominating region. Thereby, we demonstrate a
channel through which the financial sector may have exacerbated the emergence of macroeconomic
imbalances within the euro area. Additionally, we show the effects of a monetary policy rule
augmented by the loan rate spread as in Cúrdia and Woodford (2010) in a two-country monetary
union context.


