Misaligned incentives and mortgage lending in Asia
Publication Type
Book Chapter
Publication Date
2-2009
Abstract
This chapter provides a conceptual basis for the price discovery potential for tradable market instruments and specifically the development of mortgage securitization in Asia. We argue that securitization in Asia may be potentially important because it may help bring transparency to the financial sector of Asian economies. We put forth a model explaining how misaligned incentives can lead to bank-generated real estate crashes and macroeconomic instability. We provide new comparative data on the banking sector’s performance in Asia compared to the performance of securitized real estate returns, to provide evidence on the potential contribution of misaligned incentives to the magnitude of the declines in the real estate sector in the past. In particular, we show both theoretically and empirically that the banking sector suffers relatively low losses following a negative demand shock compared to the losses experienced by the real estate sector. The evidence suggests that the fact that banks’ shares are publicly traded does not discipline the bank lending officers who are driven by origination fees and market share and does not prevent underpriced lending.
Discipline
Asian Studies | Finance | Macroeconomics
Research Areas
Macroeconomics
Publication
Financial sector development in the Pacific Rim
Editor
Takatoshi Ito and Andrew K. Rose
First Page
95
Last Page
111
ISBN
9780226386843
Publisher
University of Chicago Press
City or Country
Chicago
Citation
GREEN, Richard; MARIANO, Roberto; PAVLOV, Andrey; and WACHTER, Susan.
Misaligned incentives and mortgage lending in Asia. (2009). Financial sector development in the Pacific Rim. 95-111.
Available at: https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/soe_research/2252
Creative Commons License
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