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Liberalization, Moral Hazard in Banking, and Prudential Regulation: Are Capital Requirements Enough?
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2000
Year
Financial Risk ManagementMoral HazardFinancial RegulationFinancializationFinancial SystemDynamic ModelManagementExperimental EconomicsPrudential RegulationEconomicsBank EquityAccountingFinanceBehavioral EconomicsFinancial EconomicsBusinessGamblingFinancial Decision-makingCapital StructureFinancial Crisis
In a dynamic model of moral hazard, competition can undermine prudent bank behavior. While capital-requirement regulation can induce prudent behavior, the policy yields Pareto-inefficient outcomes. Capital requirements reduce gambling incentives by putting bank equity at risk. However, they also have a perverse effect of harming banks' franchise values, thus encouraging gambling. Pareto-efficient outcomes can be achieved by adding deposit-rate controls as a regulatory instrument, since they facilitate prudent investment by increasing franchise values. Even if deposit-rate ceilings are not binding on the equilibrium path, they may be useful in deterring gambling off the equilibrium path. (JEL G2, E4, L5)
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