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Pillar 1 vs. Pillar 2 under risk management

Pillar 1 vs. Pillar 2 under risk management2005

Loriana Pelizzon

About this book

"Under the New Basel Accord bank capital adequacy rules (Pillar 1) are substantially revised but the introduction of two new "Pillars" is, perhaps, of even greater significance. This paper focuses on Pillar 2 which expands the range of instruments available to the regulator when intervening with banks that are capital inadequate and investigates the complementarity between Pillar 1 (risk-based capital requirements) and Pillar 2. In particular, the paper focuses on the role of closure rules when recapitalization is costly. In the model banks are able to manage their portfolios dynamically and their decisions on recapitalization and capital structure are determined endogenously. A feature of our approach is to consider the costs as well as the benefits of capital regulation and to accommodate the behavioral response of banks in terms of their portfolio strategy and capital structure. The paper argues that problems of capital adequacy are minor unless, in at least some states of the world, banks are able to violate the capital adequacy rules. The paper shows how the role of Pillar 2 depends on the effectiveness of capital regulation, i.e., the extent to which banks can "cheat""--National Bureau of Economic Research web site.

Details

First published
2005
OL Work ID
OL5893731W

Subjects

Banking lawBanks and bankingGovernment policyRegulationRisk managementBasel II

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Book data from Open Library. Cover images courtesy of Open Library.