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This paper presents new and official survey information on bank regulations in 142 countries and makes comparisons with two earlier surveys. The data do not suggest that countries have primarily reformed their bank regulations for the better over the last decade. Following Basel guidelines many countries strengthened capital regulations and official supervisory agencies, but existing evidence suggests that these reforms will not improve bank stability or efficiency. While some countries have empowered private monitoring of banks, consistent with the third pillar of Basel II, there are many exceptions and reversals along this dimension.
Access to Finance --- Bank --- Bank regulation --- Banks --- Banks and Banking Reform --- Capital --- Croatian national bank --- Finance --- Finance and Financial Sector Development --- Financial institutions --- Financial systems --- Governments --- Supervisory agencies
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This paper presents new and official survey information on bank regulations in 142 countries and makes comparisons with two earlier surveys. The data do not suggest that countries have primarily reformed their bank regulations for the better over the last decade. Following Basel guidelines many countries strengthened capital regulations and official supervisory agencies, but existing evidence suggests that these reforms will not improve bank stability or efficiency. While some countries have empowered private monitoring of banks, consistent with the third pillar of Basel II, there are many exceptions and reversals along this dimension.
Access to Finance --- Bank --- Bank regulation --- Banks --- Banks and Banking Reform --- Capital --- Croatian national bank --- Finance --- Finance and Financial Sector Development --- Financial institutions --- Financial systems --- Governments --- Supervisory agencies
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This paper examines the effect of Basel III implementation on the access to finance of small and medium-size enterprises in 32 emerging markets and developing economies. Analyzing rich, repeated cross-sectional data and a panel of matched firm-bank data in a difference-in-differences setting with sample selection adjustment, the authors find a short-term, moderately negative effect of Basel III on small and medium-size enterprises' access to financing. The results suggest that firms with access to bank credit prior to Basel III implementation could have been affected less than firms that were initially on the fringes of financial inclusion-firms with only a bank account. The paper fails to find any additional heterogeneous effects across firm size or age, bank capitalization or liquidity, or across countries that transitioned to Basel III from Basel II versus Basel 2.5. Overall, the initial conditions of the banking system as well as of complementary business and financial regulation can co-determine the size of short-term costs from the newly implemented global financial regulation in emerging markets and developing economies.
Bank Regulation --- Basel III --- Emerging Market Economies --- Finance and Financial Sector Development --- Financial Regulation --- Financial Regulation and Supervision --- Firm-Level Data --- Impact Evaluation --- Private Sector Development --- Small and Medium Size Enterprises --- Small And Medium-Sized Enterprises --- SME Finance
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This paper studies whether compliance with the Basel Core Principles for effective banking supervision (BCPs) is associated with bank soundness. Using data for over 3,000 banks in 86countries, we find that neither the overall index of BCP compliance nor its individual components are robustly associated with bank risk measured by Z-scores. We also fail to find a relationship between BCP compliance and systemic risk measured by a system-wide Zscore.
Banks and banking --- Risk management. --- State supervision. --- Insurance --- Management --- Banks and Banking --- Finance: General --- General Financial Markets: Government Policy and Regulation --- Banks --- Depository Institutions --- Micro Finance Institutions --- Mortgages --- Financial Institutions and Services: Government Policy and Regulation --- Banking --- Financial services law & regulation --- Finance --- Basel Core Principles --- Bank soundness --- Commercial banks --- Bank regulation --- State supervision --- Japan
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This paper is about the importance of the information in Public Credit Registries (PCRs) for supporting and improving banking sector regulation and supervision, particularly in the light of the new approach embodied in Basel III. Against the backdrop of the financial crisis and the existence of information data gaps, the importance of complete, accurate and timely credit information in the financial system is evident. Both in normal times and during crises, authorities need a device that allows them to look at the universe of credits in a detailed and readily way. And more importantly, they need to develop tools that exploit as much as possible the information therein contained. PCR databases contain individual credit information on borrowers and their credits which makes it possible to implement advanced techniques that measure banks' credit risk exposure. It allows optimizing the prudential regulation ensuring that provisioning and capital requirements are properly calibrated to cover expected and unexpected losses respectively. It also permits validating banks' internal rating systems, performing stress tests and informing macroprudential surveillance. In this respect, it is envisioned that the existence of a PCR will be a key factor to enhance the supervision and regulation of the financial system. Furthermore, the extent, accuracy and availability of the information collected by the authorities will determine the usefulness of the PCR as part of their toolkit to monitor the potential vulnerabilities not only on a microprudential level, but also on a macroprudential one.
Access to Finance --- Bank Regulation --- Banking sector --- Banking supervision --- Bankruptcy and Resolution of Financial Distress --- Banks & Banking Reform --- Capital requirements --- Credit information --- Debt Markets --- Finance and Financial Sector Development --- Financial crisis --- Financial Intermediation --- Financial system --- Prudential regulation --- Public Credit --- Rating systems
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This paper is about the importance of the information in Public Credit Registries (PCRs) for supporting and improving banking sector regulation and supervision, particularly in the light of the new approach embodied in Basel III. Against the backdrop of the financial crisis and the existence of information data gaps, the importance of complete, accurate and timely credit information in the financial system is evident. Both in normal times and during crises, authorities need a device that allows them to look at the universe of credits in a detailed and readily way. And more importantly, they need to develop tools that exploit as much as possible the information therein contained. PCR databases contain individual credit information on borrowers and their credits which makes it possible to implement advanced techniques that measure banks' credit risk exposure. It allows optimizing the prudential regulation ensuring that provisioning and capital requirements are properly calibrated to cover expected and unexpected losses respectively. It also permits validating banks' internal rating systems, performing stress tests and informing macroprudential surveillance. In this respect, it is envisioned that the existence of a PCR will be a key factor to enhance the supervision and regulation of the financial system. Furthermore, the extent, accuracy and availability of the information collected by the authorities will determine the usefulness of the PCR as part of their toolkit to monitor the potential vulnerabilities not only on a microprudential level, but also on a macroprudential one.
Access to Finance --- Bank Regulation --- Banking sector --- Banking supervision --- Bankruptcy and Resolution of Financial Distress --- Banks & Banking Reform --- Capital requirements --- Credit information --- Debt Markets --- Finance and Financial Sector Development --- Financial crisis --- Financial Intermediation --- Financial system --- Prudential regulation --- Public Credit --- Rating systems
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This paper studies whether compliance with the Basel Core Principles for Effective Banking Supervision (BCPs) improves bank soundness. The authors find a significant and positive relationship between bank soundness (measured with Moody's financial strength ratings) and compliance with principles related to information provision2. Specifically, countries that require banks to regularly and accurately report their financial data to regulators and market participants have sounder banks. This relationship is robust to controlling for broad indexes of institutional quality, macroeconomic variables, sovereign ratings, and reverse causality. Measuring soundness through Z-scores yields similar results. These findings emphasize the importance of transparency in making supervisory processes effective and strengthening market discipline. Countries aiming to upgrade banking regulation and supervision should consider giving priority to information provision over other elements of the core principles.
Banks and banking -- State supervision. --- Basil Core Principles. --- Electronic books. -- local. --- Finance --- Business & Economics --- Banking --- Banks and banking --- State supervision. --- Banks and Banking --- Finance: General --- General Financial Markets: Government Policy and Regulation --- Banks --- Depository Institutions --- Micro Finance Institutions --- Mortgages --- Financial Institutions and Services: Government Policy and Regulation --- Financial services law & regulation --- Bank soundness --- Basel Core Principles --- Bank supervision --- Bank regulation --- State supervision --- Hong Kong Special Administrative Region, People's Republic of China
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The paper provides robust evidence that compliance with Basel Core Principles (BCPs) has a strong positive effect on the Z-score of conventional banks, albeit less pronounced on the Zscore of Islamic banks. Using a sample of banks operating in 19 developing countries, the results appear to be driven by capital ratios, a component of Z-score for the two types of banks. Even though smaller on Islamic banks, individual chapters of BCPs also suggest a positive effect on the stability of conventional banks. The findings support the effective role of BCP standards in improving bank stability, whose important implications led to the Islamic Financial Services Board (IFSB) publication of new recommendations in 2015 to bring BCP standards in line with the Core Principles for Islamic Finance Regulation (CPIFRs) standards. Our findings suggest that because Islamic banks are benchmarked closely to BCPs, the implementation of CPFIRs should also positively affect their stability.
Banks and Banking --- Finance: General --- Islamic Banking and Finance --- General Financial Markets: Government Policy and Regulation --- Banks --- Depository Institutions --- Micro Finance Institutions --- Mortgages --- Comparative Analysis of Economic Systems --- Financial Institutions and Services: Government Policy and Regulation --- Other Economic Systems: Public Economics --- Financial Economics --- Financial services law & regulation --- Banking --- Finance --- Basel Core Principles --- Islamic banking --- Bank regulation --- Bank supervision --- Financial regulation and supervision --- Bank soundness --- Financial sector policy and analysis --- Financial services --- Banks and banking --- State supervision --- Islamic countries --- United Kingdom
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We explore the relationship between banking sector performance and the quality of regulation and supervision as measured by compliance with the Basel Core Principles for Effective Banking Supervision (BCP). Using BCP assessment results for 65 countries and 1998-2002 panel data for other variables, we find a significant positive impact of higher compliance with BCP on banking sector performance, as measured by nonperforming loans and net interest margin, after controlling for the level of development of the economy and the financial system and macroeconomic and structural factors.
Banks and banking --- Risk management. --- Bank capital. --- Capital --- Insurance --- Management --- State supervision. --- Banks and Banking --- Econometrics --- Finance: General --- Industries: Financial Services --- Banks --- Depository Institutions --- Micro Finance Institutions --- Mortgages --- Financial Institutions and Services: Government Policy and Regulation --- General Financial Markets: Government Policy and Regulation --- Estimation --- Financial services law & regulation --- Finance --- Banking --- Econometrics & economic statistics --- Nonperforming loans --- Basel Core Principles --- Commercial banks --- Bank supervision --- Estimation techniques --- Financial institutions --- Financial regulation and supervision --- Bank regulation --- State supervision --- Loans --- Econometric models --- United States
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The paper considers the generic arguments for and against the creation of a unified regulatory agency, covering each of the main types of financial institutions (banks, insurers and securities firms). The strongest arguments for unification are the enhanced oversight of financial conglomerates and the economies of scale they can potentially deliver. However, there are also a number of potentially serious disadvantages to unification, especially the risk that the change process will be mismanaged and will result in a reduction in regulatory capacity. The issue requires careful deliberation and ultimately depends on a matrix of factors which vary in importance from country to country.
Banks and Banking --- Industries: Financial Services --- Business and Financial --- General Financial Markets: Government Policy and Regulation --- Financial Institutions and Services: Government Policy and Regulation --- Regulation and Business Law: General --- Regulation and Industrial Policy: General --- Banks --- Depository Institutions --- Micro Finance Institutions --- Mortgages --- Financial Institutions and Services: General --- Financial services law & regulation --- Banking --- Finance --- Financial regulation and supervision --- Bank supervision --- Financial sector --- Financial services --- Economic sectors --- Bank regulation --- Banks and banking --- Financial services industry --- Law and legislation --- State supervision --- United Kingdom
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