Corruption and Government Intervention on Bank Risk-Taking: Cases of Asian Countries

This paper aims to addresses the impact of corruption, anti-corruption commission, and government intervention on bank’s risk-taking using banks in Asian Countries such as  Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand, and South of Korea during the period 1995-2016. This paper uses corruption variable, bank-specif...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Rizky Maulana Nurhidayat, Rofikoh Rokhim
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universitas Negeri Semarang 2018-09-01
Series:Jurnal Dinamika Manajemen
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journal.unnes.ac.id/nju/index.php/jdm/article/view/15951
Description
Summary:This paper aims to addresses the impact of corruption, anti-corruption commission, and government intervention on bank’s risk-taking using banks in Asian Countries such as  Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand, and South of Korea during the period 1995-2016. This paper uses corruption variable, bank-specific variables, macroeconomic variables, dummy variables and interaction variable to estimate bank’s risk-taking variable. Using data from 76 banks in Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand and South Korea over 21 years, this research finds consistent evidence that higher level of corruption and government intervention in crisis-situation will increase the risk-taking behaviour of banks. In the other hand, bank risk-taking behaviour minimized by the existence of anti-corruption commission. In addition, this paper also finds that government intervention amplifies corruption’s effect on bank’s risk-taking behaviour because of strong signs of moral hazard and weaknesses in the governance and supervision.
ISSN:2086-0668
2337-5434