Bank regulation and risk-taking in sub-Sahara Africa

IF 2 Q2 BUSINESS, FINANCE Journal of Financial Regulation and Compliance Pub Date : 2022-06-20 DOI:10.1108/jfrc-12-2021-0104
Sopani Gondwe, T. Gwatidzo, N. Mahonye
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Purpose In a bid to enhance the stability of banks, supervisory authorities in sub-Sahara Africa (SSA) have also adopted international bank regulatory standards based on the Basel core principles. This paper aims to investigate the effectiveness of these regulations in mitigating Bank risk (instability) in SSA. The focus of empirical analysis is on examining the implications of four regulations (capital, activity restrictions, supervisory power and market discipline) on risk-taking behaviour of banks. Design/methodology/approach This paper uses two dimensions of financial stability in relation to two different sources of bank risk: solvency risk and liquidity risk. This paper uses information from the World Bank Regulatory Survey database to construct regulation indices on activity restrictions and the three regulations pertaining to the three pillars of Basel II, i.e. capital, supervisory power and market discipline. The paper then uses a two-step system generalised method of moments estimator to estimate the impact of each regulation on solvency and liquidity risk. Findings The overall results show that: regulations pertaining to capital (Pillar 1) and market discipline (Pillar 3) are effective in reducing solvency risk; and regulations pertaining to supervisory power (Pillar 2) and activity restrictions increase liquidity risk (i.e. reduce bank stability). Research limitations/implications Given some evidence from other studies which show that market power (competition) tends to condition the effect of regulations on bank stability, it would have been more informative to examine whether this is really the case in SSA, given the low levels of competition in some countries. This study is limited in this regard. Practical implications The key policy implications from the study findings are three-fold: bank supervisory agencies in SSA should prioritise the adoption of Pillars 1 and 3 of the Basel II framework as an effective policy response to enhance the stability of the banking system; a universal banking model is more stability enhancing; and there is a trade-off between stronger supervisory power and liquidity stability that needs to be properly managed every time regulatory agencies increase their supervisory mandate. Originality/value This paper provides new evidence on which Pillars of the Basel II regulatory framework are more effective in reducing bank risk in SSA. This paper also shows that the way regulations affect solvency risk is different from that of liquidity risk – an approach that allows for case specific policy interventions based on the type of bank risk under consideration. Ignoring this dual dimension of bank stability can thus lead to erroneous policy inferences.
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撒哈拉以南非洲的银行监管和风险承担
为了增强银行的稳定性,撒哈拉以南非洲(SSA)的监管当局也采用了基于巴塞尔核心原则的国际银行监管标准。本文旨在探讨这些法规在降低SSA银行风险(不稳定性)方面的有效性。实证分析的重点是考察四项法规(资本、活动限制、监管权力和市场纪律)对银行冒险行为的影响。设计/方法/方法本文使用金融稳定性的两个维度,涉及两种不同的银行风险来源:偿付能力风险和流动性风险。本文利用世界银行监管调查数据库中的信息,构建了活动限制的监管指标,以及与巴塞尔协议II三大支柱(资本、监管权力和市场纪律)相关的三项监管指标。然后,本文使用二阶广义矩估计方法来估计每项监管对偿付能力和流动性风险的影响。总体结果表明:资本监管(支柱1)和市场监管(支柱3)在降低偿付能力风险方面是有效的;与监管权力(支柱2)和活动限制有关的法规会增加流动性风险(即降低银行稳定性)。考虑到其他研究的一些证据表明,市场力量(竞争)往往会影响监管对银行稳定性的影响,考虑到一些国家的竞争水平较低,检查SSA是否真的是这种情况会更有意义。本研究在这方面是有限的。实际影响研究结果的主要政策影响有三个方面:SSA的银行监管机构应优先采用巴塞尔协议II框架的第1和第3支柱,作为加强银行体系稳定性的有效政策回应;全能银行模式更能增强稳定性;而且,在加强监管权力与流动性稳定之间存在权衡,每次监管机构增加监管授权时,都需要妥善管理这种权衡。原创性/价值本文提供了新的证据,证明巴塞尔协议II监管框架的哪些支柱在降低SSA中的银行风险方面更有效。本文还表明,监管影响偿付能力风险的方式不同于流动性风险的方式,后者允许基于所考虑的银行风险类型进行具体案例的政策干预。因此,忽视银行稳定性的这一双重维度可能导致错误的政策推断。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.60
自引率
11.10%
发文量
35
期刊介绍: Since its inception in 1992, the Journal of Financial Regulation and Compliance has provided an authoritative and scholarly platform for international research in financial regulation and compliance. The journal is at the intersection between academic research and the practice of financial regulation, with distinguished past authors including senior regulators, central bankers and even a Prime Minister. Financial crises, predatory practices, internationalization and integration, the increased use of technology and financial innovation are just some of the changes and issues that contemporary financial regulators are grappling with. These challenges and changes hold profound implications for regulation and compliance, ranging from macro-prudential to consumer protection policies. The journal seeks to illuminate these issues, is pluralistic in approach and invites scholarly papers using any appropriate methodology. Accordingly, the journal welcomes submissions from finance, law, economics and interdisciplinary perspectives. A broad spectrum of research styles, sources of information and topics (e.g. banking laws and regulations, stock market and cross border regulation, risk assessment and management, training and competence, competition law, case law, compliance and regulatory updates and guidelines) are appropriate. All submissions are double-blind refereed and judged on academic rigour, originality, quality of exposition and relevance to policy and practice. Once accepted, individual articles are typeset, proofed and published online as the Version of Record within an average of 32 days, so that articles can be downloaded and cited earlier.
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