BoE publishes Haldane paper on constraining discretion in bank regulation

16 May 2013

Speaking at the conference, 'Maintaining Financial Stability: Holding a Tiger by the Tail(s)', Haldane said that making greater use of simple, prudent regulatory metrics could restore faith, hope and clarity to the financial system - to the benefit of banks, investors and regulators alike.

The Libor scandal has exposed many of the same self-regulatory problems. The incentives to shade their self-assessed Libor exam grades proved too much for too many for too long. As it is now known, systematic misreporting resulted. The self-regulatory model was again found wanting.

Yet there is one area of finance where self-regulation continues to stage a last stand – bank capital standards. Since the mid-1990s, banking regulators globally have allowed banks the discretion to use their own models to calculate capital needs. Most large banks today use these models to scale their regulatory capital. In doing so they are, in essence, marking their own exams.

This self-regulatory shift was made with the best of intentions. Yet its consequences have been predictable. Self-assessment has created incentives to shade reported capital ratios. As elsewhere, a regulatory regime of constrained discretion has given way to one with too much unconstrained indiscretion.

This calls for regulatory repair. Without change, the current regulatory system risks suffering, like the Chicago teachers and the Libor fixers, reputational damage. Fortunately, there are early signs that regulatory change is afoot to place tighter constraints on this (in)discretion.

To understand how we ended up here, it is useful to explore the historical contours of the regulatory debate. This is a history in roughly four chapters:

Each of these historical chapters was a logical response to the perceived problems of the day. Even with the benefit of hindsight, these steps seem like sensible ones. In particular, there appear to have been three key objectives behind the evolution of international bank regulation over the period:

All of these responses were understandable and, in concept, laudable. The question is whether, with the benefit of hindsight, they have been successful.

Over the course of the past 20 years, banking regulation has edged in a self-regulatory direction for understandable, but self-defeating, reasons. The regulatory regime has tilted from constrained discretion to unconstrained indiscretion. It will be a long journey home, but that journey has started. Making greater use of simple, prudent regulatory metrics could restore faith, hope and clarity to the financial system to the benefit of banks, investors and regulators alike.

Full speech


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