Abstract
A consensus is emerging that in order to understand the global financial landscape one needs to pay attention to the key institutions that are said to dominate it, namely large banking entities. This paper challenges that consensus as applied to eurozone-centred debt flows. Though bank-centred approaches are well equipped to explain a significant portion of cross-border debt dynamics through carry trades, there is little evidence this constituted the central mechanism for channelling flows. The expansion of debt flows is instead explained by depressed returns on fixed income instruments and the ensuing asset-liability mismatches which led investors to move into financial sector debt and yield-producing securitized assets. An investor-centred as opposed to a bank-centred understanding of debt flows has important financial stability and policy implications.
Keywords
Get full access to this article
View all access options for this article.
