Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 January 2020
This paper surveys the recent academic literature on the economics of cross-border regulatory cooperation as well as recent policy developments in this area. While institutional arrangements of cross-border regulatory cooperation used to focus on day-to-day supervisory tasks, the crisis has given an impetus to a focus on cooperation at the bank resolution stage, with an array of different cooperation forms. A growing theoretical literature has documented different externalities arising from national supervision of cross-border banks, while empirical evidence has been relatively scarce. The paper concludes with a forward looking agenda both for policy reform and academic research in this area.
This paper is based on previous work with several co-authors, including Michael Fuchs, Dorothe Singer, Wolf Wagner and Makaio Witte. I am grateful to two anonymous reviewers for their comments.