“…From a theoretical perspective, Bruno and Shin (2013) have highlighted how the cross-border capital flows of banks are driven by the leverage cycle of global banks, providing empirical evidence that these global factors dominate other local factors. Most studies have taken instead an empirical perspective, tracing a country's financial integration to macroeconomic characteristics such as trade openness, the level of financial development, and per capita income (Lane and Milesi-Ferretti, 2008), or documenting banks' international portfolios and cross-border lending respond -at least in the long term -to economic conditions in the originating and recipient country, such as trade links, a common language, or market size a common language (Blank and Bush, 2010;Cerruti et al, 2015), and by institutional and policy variables such as regulations, capital controls, and macroprudential policies (Houston et al, 2012;Cerruti and Zhou, 2018).…”