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The Procyclical Effects of Bank Capital Regulation
- Publication Year :
- 2012
-
Abstract
- We develop and calibrate a dynamic equilibrium model of relationship lending in which banks are unable to access the equity markets every period and the business cycle is a Markov process that determines loans' probabilities of default. Banks anticipate that shocks to their earnings and the possible variation of capital requirements over the cycle can impair their future lending capacity and, as a precaution, hold capital buffers. We compare the relative performance of several capital regulation regimes, including one that maximizes a measure of social welfare. We show that Basel II is significantly more procyclical than Basel I, but makes banks safer. For this reason, it dominates Basel I in terms of welfare except for small social costs of bank failure. We also show that for high values of this cost, Basel III points in the right direction, with higher but less cyclically-varying capital requirements.
- Subjects :
- Economics and Econometrics
Solvency
Earnings
media_common.quotation_subject
jel:E44
Banking regulation, Basel capital requirements, Capital market frictions, Credit rationing, Loan defaults, Relationship banking, Social cost of bank failure
Monetary economics
Basel II
Recession
jel:G21
Banking regulation
Business cycles
Capital requirements
Credit crunch
Loan defaults
Relationship banking
jel:G28
Basel capital requirements
Capital market frictions
Credit rationing
Social cost of bank failure
Accounting
Capital (economics)
Economics
Business cycle
Capital requirement
Finance
media_common
Subjects
Details
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....641e2fb99dfcf9a1af03bc6df1f147e3