The Pak Banker

China banks differ about banking across borders

- -AFP

A research studies the global footprint of Chinese banks, and compares it with that of other major bank nationalit­ies.

Chinese banks account for 24% of all cross-border lending to borrowers in emerging market and developing economies (EMDEs), more than double that of Japanese banks, the closest competitor. Further, almost half of all EMDE borrowers rely on Chinese banks as their most important lender.

Our paper makes three main contributi­ons. First, it supports the need to follow a nationalit­y approach in the analysis of global business operations, as internatio­nal banks, and Chinese banks in particular, provide a substantia­l share of their cross-border lending from abroad. Second, it presents a new distance measure between borrowers and lenders that takes the global network of affiliates into account. Third, it contribute­s to a better understand­ing of China's role as a lender in internatio­nal markets, in particular to EMDE borrowers.

Chinese banks have become the largest cross-border creditors for EMDEs. Their global reach resembles that of banks from advanced economies (AEs), with greater distances deterring their cross-border lending to EMDE borrowers relatively more than that to AEs.

Conversely, Chinese banks' lending to EMDEs is deterred less by longer distances than that of their peer EMDE banks. Further, Chinese banks lend more to those EMDE borrowers with which strong bilateral trade relationsh­ips exist and, unlike other banks, they lend less to countries with large bilateral portfolio investment­s.

BEIJING:

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