Recessions and Recoveries. Multinational Banks in the Business Cycle
Abstract
This paper studies the influence of multinational banks on the dynamics, depth and duration of business cycles. In our economy, multinational banks can transfer liquidity across borders through internal capital markets but are hindered in their allocation of liquidity by limited knowledge of local firms' assets. We find that, following domestic banking shocks, multinational banks can moderate the contractionary phase and the depth of the recession but slow down the subsequent recovery. A calibration to data on the Polish economy suggests that multinational banks reduce the depth of recessions by about 10%but increase their duration by 5%.