Policy Instruments to Lean Against the Wind in Latin America
This paper reviews policy tools that have been used and/or are available for policy makers in the region to lean against the wind and review relevant country experiences using them. The instruments examined include: (i) capital requirements, dynamic provisioning, and leverage ratios; (ii) liquidity requirements; (iii) debt-to-income ratios; (iv) loan-to-value ratios; (v) reserve requirements on bank liabilities (deposits and nondeposits); (vi) instruments to manage and limit systemic foreign exchange risk; and, finally, (vii) reserve requirements or taxes on capital inflows. Although the instruments analyzed are mainly microprudential in nature, appropriately calibrated over the financial cycle they may serve for macroprudential purposes.
Year of publication: |
2011-07-01
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Institutions: | International Monetary Fund (IMF) ; International Monetary Fund |
Subject: | Reserve requirements | Banking sector | Capital controls | Capital flows | Latin America | Risk management | financial system | foreign exchange | banking | bank liabilities | financial excesses | foreign exchange market | financial institutions | excess demand | off balance sheet | bank deposits | derivatives markets | probability of default | derivatives transaction | banking system |
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