Supply Shocks and the Cyclical Behaviour of Bank Lending Rates under the Basel Accords
This paper examines the cyclical e¤ects of bank capital requirements in a simple macro model with credit market frictions. A bank capital channel is introduced through a monitoring incentive effect of bank capital buffers on the repayment probability and hence the loan rate. We also identify a collateral channel, which mitigates moral hazard behaviour by firms, and therefore raises their repayment probability. Basel I and Basel II regulatory regimes are then defined, with a distinction made between the Standardized and Foundation Internal Ratings Based (IRB) approaches of Basel II. We analyze the role of the bank capital and collateral channels in the transmission of supply shocks, and show that depending on the strength of these channels, the loan rate can either amplify or mitigate the e¤ects of the shock. Finally, the relative impact of the two channels also determines which of the regulatory regimes is most procyclical.
Year of publication: |
2012
|
---|---|
Authors: | Zilberman, Roy |
Institutions: | School of Economics, University of Manchester |
Saved in:
freely available
Saved in favorites
Similar items by person
-
'Loan Loss Provisioning Rules, Procyclicality, and Financial Volatility'
Agénor, Pierre-Richard, (2013)
-
'Financial Regulation, Credit and Liquidity Policy and the Business Cycle'
Bratsiotis, George J., (2014)
-
Macroprudential regulation and the role of monetary policy
Tayler, William, (2014)
- More ...