Agénor, P.-R.; Alper, K.; Pereira da Silva, L.
Description:
The business cycle effects of bank
capital regulatory regimes are examined in a New Keynesian
model with credit market imperfections and a cost channel of
monetary policy. Key features of the model are that bank
capital increases incentives for banks to monitor borrowers,
thereby reducing the probability of default, and excess
capital generates benefits in terms of reduced regulatory
scrutiny. Basel I and Basel II-type regulatory regimes are
defined, and the model is calibrated for a middle-income
country. Simulations of supply and demand shocks show that,
depending on the elasticity that relates the repayment
probability to the capital-loan ratio, a Basel II-type
regime may be less procyclical than a Basel I-type regime.