Bank Capital Requirement Reform: Long-Term Size and Structure, the Transition, and Cycles
There is general agreement that the minimum bank capital ratio requirements (hereafter MCRR) set by regulators in the US and elsewhere were inadequate leading up to the financial crisis, and that this substantially contributed to the financial crisis.
There is general agreement that the minimum bank capital ratio requirements (hereafter MCRR) set by regulators in the US and elsewhere were inadequate leading up to the financial crisis, and that this substantially contributed to the financial crisis. Inadequate MCRR contributed to the crisis ex ante by encouraging excessive risk taking (the so-called moral-hazard problem of limited liability, which is exacerbated by the possibility of taxpayer-financed bailouts); ex post, inadequate capital meant that intermediaries’ net worth was too low to absorb losses without jeopardizing banks’ solvency, substantially raising counterparty risk among banks, and thereby producing a funding liquidity crisis for banks that led to massive credit contraction, selloffs of risky assets, and widespread financial distress.
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