Regulators require banks to maintain capital above a certain level in order to correct the incentives to make excessively risky loans. However, it has never been clear how regulators determine how high or low the minimum capital–asset ratio should be. An examination of US regulators’ justifications for five regulations is-sued over more than thirty years reveals that regulators have never performed a serious economic analysis that would justify the levels that they have chosen. In-stead, regulators appear to have followed a practice of incremental change de-signed to weed out a handful of outlier banks. This approach resulted in signifi-cant regulatory failures leading up to the financial crisis of 2007–2008
SIGLEAvailable from British Library Document Supply Centre-DSC:9350.949(EU-DAFM-WP--96/16) / BLDSC -...
The regulation of financial markets and banking industry has become one of the most discus- sed top...
C apital regulations for banks are based on the idea that the riskier abank’s assets are, the more c...
Minimum capital regulations play a central role in banking regulation. Regulators require banks to m...
Regulators require banks to maintain capital above a certain level in order to correct the incentive...
Improving commercial bank capital requirements has been a top priority on the regulatory agenda sinc...
The subject of bank capital adequacy has been attracting attention for a long time. But recently, th...
After the Latin American Debt Crisis of 1982, the official response worldwide turned to minimum capi...
This chapter aims to provide a concise overview of the capital adequacy regulation, importance of th...
Banks must maintain minimum capital levels, but a regulated balance sheet implies profit suboptimiza...
We extend the literature on the role of capital requirements as a regulatory tool by developing a co...
To calculate regulatory capital ratios, banks have to apply adjustments to book equity. These regula...
We analyze a general equilibrium model in which there is both adverse selection of, and moral hazard...
This article considers two fundamental issues in the design of bank capital regulation—the choice of...
We analyze a general equilibrium model in which there is both adverse selec-tion of and moral hazard...
SIGLEAvailable from British Library Document Supply Centre-DSC:9350.949(EU-DAFM-WP--96/16) / BLDSC -...
The regulation of financial markets and banking industry has become one of the most discus- sed top...
C apital regulations for banks are based on the idea that the riskier abank’s assets are, the more c...
Minimum capital regulations play a central role in banking regulation. Regulators require banks to m...
Regulators require banks to maintain capital above a certain level in order to correct the incentive...
Improving commercial bank capital requirements has been a top priority on the regulatory agenda sinc...
The subject of bank capital adequacy has been attracting attention for a long time. But recently, th...
After the Latin American Debt Crisis of 1982, the official response worldwide turned to minimum capi...
This chapter aims to provide a concise overview of the capital adequacy regulation, importance of th...
Banks must maintain minimum capital levels, but a regulated balance sheet implies profit suboptimiza...
We extend the literature on the role of capital requirements as a regulatory tool by developing a co...
To calculate regulatory capital ratios, banks have to apply adjustments to book equity. These regula...
We analyze a general equilibrium model in which there is both adverse selection of, and moral hazard...
This article considers two fundamental issues in the design of bank capital regulation—the choice of...
We analyze a general equilibrium model in which there is both adverse selec-tion of and moral hazard...
SIGLEAvailable from British Library Document Supply Centre-DSC:9350.949(EU-DAFM-WP--96/16) / BLDSC -...
The regulation of financial markets and banking industry has become one of the most discus- sed top...
C apital regulations for banks are based on the idea that the riskier abank’s assets are, the more c...