Abstract

We examine the effect of competition and business cycles on bank capital buffers around the world. We use a dataset of 3461 banks from 25 developed and 54 developing countries over the 2001–2013 period. Banks tend on average to exhibit pro-cyclical behavior. But capital buffers seem to be more pro-cyclical in developing countries. Our results show that more competition leads to higher buffers in developed countries but to lower buffers in developing ones. This evidence suggests that the “competition-stability” thesis adheres in developed economies, whereas “competition-fragility” makes more sense in developing countries. This asymmetric result may have important policy implications, particularly with regard to new, globally-negotiated capital adequacy standards.

Highlights

  • Bank capital buffers around the world: Cyclical patterns and the effect of market power

  • Funding text This paper was initially prepared for the XI Annual Seminar on Risk, Financial Stability and Banking, jointly organized by Banco Central do Brasil, Fundação Getulio Vargas, Bank of Finland and the Journal of Financial Stability (August 2016)

  • We benefited greatly from comments made in that seminar, especially those of our discussant Rafael Schiozer of Fundação Getulio Vargas

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Summary

Introduction

Bank capital buffers around the world: Cyclical patterns and the effect of market power SciVal Topic Prominence Topic: Banks | Bank capital | capital ratios Prominence percentile: 93.623

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Conclusion
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