Quotes: US MENA   Enter Symbol: NewsLetter: Search: advanced

Better than Basel  Join our daily free Newsletter

MENAFN - Jordan Times - 07/05/2012

No. of Ratings : 0
Digg This Article: http%3a%2f%2fwww.menafn.com%2fmenafn%2fqn_news_story_s.aspx%3fstoryid%3d1093510894%26title%3dBetter-than-Basel Share This Article: http%3a%2f%2fwww.menafn.com%2fmenafn%2fqn_news_story_s.aspx%3fstoryid%3d1093510894%26title%3dBetter-than-Basel Add to Delicious Seed this article Buzz this article Add to Reddit Add to furl Add to stumbleupon Add to Mixx!


 


(MENAFN - Jordan Times) The Basel Accords - meant to protect depositors and the public in general from bad banking practices - exacerbated the downward economic spiral triggered by the financial crisis of 2008. Throughout the crisis, as business confidence evaporated, banks were forced to sell assets and cut lending in order to maintain capital requirements stipulated by the accords. This lending squeeze resulted in a sharp drop in GDP and employment, while the sharp sell-off in assets ensured further declines.

My recent study with Jacopo Carmassi, Time to Set Banking Regulation Right, shows that by permitting excessive leverage and risk-taking by large international banks - in some cases allowing banks to accumulate total liabilities up to 40, or even 50, times their equity capital - the Basel banking rules not only enabled, but, ironically, intensified the crisis.

After the crisis, world leaders and central bankers overhauled banking regulations, first and foremost by rectifying the Basel prudential rules. Unfortunately, the new Basel III Accord and the ensuing EU Capital Requirements Directive have failed to correct the two main shortcomings of international prudential rules - namely, their reliance on banks' risk-management models for the calculation of capital requirements, and the lack of supervisory accountability.

The latest example highlighting this flaw is Dexia, the Belgian-French banking group that failed in 2011 - just after passing the European Banking Authority's stress test with flying colours. The stunning opacity of solvency ratios encouraged regulators to turn a blind eye to banks' excessive risk taking.

The problem is that the Basel capital rules - whether Basel I, II, or III - are of no help in separating the weak banks from the sound ones. Indeed, more often than not, the banks that failed or had to be rescued in the wake of the 2008 financial crisis had solvency ratios higher than those of banks that remained standing without assistance.

Compounding the problem, the diversity in banks' capital ratios also indicates a dramatic distortion of the international playing field, as increasingly competitive conditions in financial markets have led to national discretion in applying the rules. Meanwhile, the opacity of capital indicators has made market discipline impossible to impose.

Thus, large banks are likely to continue to hold too little capital and to take excessive risks, raising the prospect of renewed bouts of financial instability. In order to overcome these shortcomings in international banking regulations, three remedies are needed.

First, capital requirements should be set as a straightforward ratio of common equity to total assets, thereby abandoning all reference to banks' own risk management models. The new capital ratio should be raised to 7-10 per cent of total assets in order to dampen risk taking by bankers and minimise the real economic impact of large-scale deleveraging following a loss of confidence in the banking system.

Second, new capital ratios with multiple and decreasing capital thresholds, which trigger increasingly intrusive corrective action, should serve as the basis for a new system of mandated supervisory action. Supervisors should be bound by a presumption that they will act. They could argue that action is not necessary in a specific case, but they would have to do so publicly, thus becoming accountable for their inaction. In order to eradicate moral hazard, the system must have a resolution procedure to close banks when their capital falls below a minimum threshold.

Finally, solvency rules should be complemented by an obligation that banks issue a substantial amount of non-collateralised debt - on the order of 100 per cent of their capital - that is convertible into equity. These debentures should be designed to create a strong incentive for bank managers and shareholders to issue equity rather than suffer conversion.

These three measures, if applied to all banks, would eliminate the need for special rules governing liquidity or funding (which would remain open to supervisory review, but not to binding constraints). There would also be no need for special restrictions on banking activities and operations.

The most remarkable feature of the policy deliberations on prudential banking rules so far has been their delegation to the Basel Committee of Banking Supervisors and the banks themselves, both of which have a vested interest in preserving the existing system. Governments and parliaments have an obligation to launch a thorough review of the Basel rules, and to demand revisions that align them with the public interest.

The writer is director general of Assonime, visiting professor at the College of Europe in Bruges, member of the board of directors of the Centre for European Policy Studies (CEPS) and chairman of the board of the CIR Group. Project Syndicate, 2012. www.project-syndicate.org

 






  MENA News Headlines
May 21 2013Vodafone annual profits slump 90% on eurozone woes ,AFP
(MENAFN - AFP) British mobile phone giant Vodafone on Tuesday reported a 90-percent plunge in annual net profit after taking a vast impairment charge relating to poor business in debt-laden ...

May 21 2013Microsoft readies new Xbox as entertainment hub ,AFP
(MENAFN - AFP) Microsoft offers a glimpse Tuesday at a new-generation Xbox as videogame consoles evolve into home entertainment centers and adapt to competition from smartphones and tablets. A ...

May 21 2013JPMorgan shareholders keep Dimon chairman, CEO ,AFP
(MENAFN - AFP) JPMorgan Chase shareholders Tuesday rejected a proposal to split the chairman and chief executive roles, handing bank chief Jamie Dimon a big victory. The shareholder proposal to ...

May 21 2013Softbank to issue record bonds for Sprint takeover ,AFP
(MENAFN - AFP) Japanese mobile operator Softbank said Tuesday it planned to raise $3.9 billion through a record bond issuance in June to finance its proposed takeover of US firm Sprint ...

May 21 2013Ryanair mulls Poland-Israel route for Auschwitz trips ,AFP
(MENAFN - AFP) Low-cost European airline Ryanair is looking at introducing flights between Israel and Poland to cater for Israeli schoolchildren visiting the former Nazi death camp at ...

May 21 2013Indonesia approves DBS purchase of Danamon stake ,AFP
(MENAFN - AFP) Indonesia on Tuesday approved the purchase by Singapore's DBS of a 40 percent stake in Bank Danamon, but demanded the city-state open up its financial sector before any full ...

May 21 2013SkyWest says to buy 100 Embraer jets ,AFP
(MENAFN - AFP) SkyWest, Inc. announced Tuesday it has struck an agreement with Brazil's Embraer for the purchase of 100 new E175 jet aircraft, with 40 considered firm deliveries. The deal also ...

May 21 2013Europe stocks trade mixed, London beats 13-year peak ,AFP
(MENAFN - AFP) European stock markets diverged on Tuesday, as London shot past its 13-year peak amid stimulus policies from top world central banks and a barrage of company results, dealers ...

May 21 2013European power firms sound alarm over energy policy ,AFP
(MENAFN - AFP) French group GDF Suez led an attack by eight leading European power companies on EU energy policy on Tuesday, saying it had "failed" and was destroying parts of the sector. In what ...

May 21 2013Nobel laureate plays down flu pandemic scaremongering ,AFP
(MENAFN - AFP) A Nobel prize-winning scientist Tuesday played down "shock-horror scenarios" that a new virus strain will emerge with the potential to kill millions of people. Peter Doherty, who ...

more...


 
MENAFN






Google

 
 

Middle East North Africa - Financial Network

MENAFN News Market Data Countries Tools Section  
 

Middle East North Africa - Financial Network
Arabic MENAFN

Main News
News By Industry
News By Country
Marketwatch News
UPI News
Comtex News

IPO News
Islamic Finance News
Private Equity News

How-To Guides
Technology Section

Travel Section

Search News

Market Indices
Quotes & Charts

Global Indices
Arab Indices

US Markets Details

Commodoties

Oil & Energy

Currencies Cross Rates
Currencies Updates
Currency Converter

USA Stocks
Arab Stocks
 

Algeria 
Bahrain 
Egypt 
Iraq
Jordan 
Kuwait 
Lebanon
Morocco 
Oman 
Palestine
Qatar 
Saudi Arabia 
Syria
Tunisia 
UAE 
Yemen

Weather
Investment Game
Economic Calendar
Financial Glossary

My MENAFN
Portfolio Tracker

Voting

Financial Calculators

RSS Feeds [XML]

Corporate Monitor

Events

Real Estate
Submit Your Property

Arab Research
Buy a Research

Press Releases
Submit your PR

Join Newsletters


 
© 2000 menafn.com All Rights Reserved.  Terms of Service | Privacy Policy | Contact Us | Advertise | About MENAFN | Career Opportunities | Feedback | Help