Foreign Banking: Do Countries' WTO Commitments Match Actual Practices?

WTO Staff Working Paper No. ERSD-2006-11

59 Pages Posted: 12 Dec 2006

See all articles by James R. Barth

James R. Barth

Auburn University; Milken Institute

Juan A. Marchetti

World Trade Organization (WTO)

Daniel E. Nolle

affiliation not provided to SSRN

Wanvimol Sawangngoenyuang

Claremont Colleges - Claremont Graduate University

Date Written: October 2006

Abstract

The General Agreement on Trade in Services (known as the GATS) is an important new element in the international framework that affects the regulation of every WTO Member's financial sector. However, except for a limited number of country-specific case studies, no attempt has been made to compare WTO commitments to open the domestic banking sector to foreign banks with actual regulatory practice in a systematic and comprehensive manner on a cross-country basis. Nor has much attention been devoted to systematically and comprehensively assess the degree to which WTO Members discriminate against foreign bank. This paper draws upon a new and comprehensive dataset consisting of the commitments countries made at the WTO and the regulations actually imposed on foreign banks by those countries. The dataset covers 123 WTO Members for whom there was also information available on their current regulatory regime for banking (based on the responses to a World Bank survey as discussed in Barth, Caprio, and Levine (2006)). On the basis of that data, the authors develop indices measuring the degree of openness to foreign banking based upon both commitments made and actual regulatory practice, with a view to assessing the overall extent to which countries open their borders to foreign banks more than they are legally obliged to do based upon their WTO commitments. The dataset is also used to assess the overall extent to which countries discriminate against foreign banks by regulating them less favorably than domestic banks. Although our results are still quite preliminary, they do show substantial divergences between commitments and practices. Indices of market openness and discrimination reveal wide differences among the 123 countries in the sample. The paper also identifies various factors that help explain the level of commitments that WTO Members have made.

Keywords: Bank regulation, banking, financial services, financial sector liberalization, foreign bank entry, GATS, trade in services, WTO

JEL Classification: D78, F13, G20, G21, G28

Suggested Citation

Barth, James R. and Marchetti, Juan A. and Nolle, Daniel E. and Sawangngoenyuang, Wanvimol, Foreign Banking: Do Countries' WTO Commitments Match Actual Practices? (October 2006). WTO Staff Working Paper No. ERSD-2006-11 , Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=950198 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.950198

James R. Barth (Contact Author)

Auburn University ( email )

415 West Magnolia Avenue
Auburn, AL 36849
United States
334-844-2469 (Phone)
334-844-4960 (Fax)

Milken Institute ( email )

1250 Fourth Street
Santa Monica, CA 90401
United States

Juan A. Marchetti

World Trade Organization (WTO) ( email )

154 Rue de Lausanne
CH-1211 Geneva 21
Switzerland

Daniel E. Nolle

affiliation not provided to SSRN

Wanvimol Sawangngoenyuang

Claremont Colleges - Claremont Graduate University ( email )

150 E. Tenth Street
Claremont, CA 91711
United States

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