Need for Reform of EU Banking Regulation: Decoupling the Solvency of Banks and Sovereigns

Press Release of October 17, 2012

Recent developments in Ireland, Greece, and Spain have shown that sovereign debt crises endanger the solvency of domestic banking sectors, while banking crises in turn endanger the solvency of the domestic sovereign. This vicious circle between government and bank solvency is exacerbated by the home bias in banks’ government bond portfolios, that is, the banks' excessive exposure to domestic government debt. Neither current European banking regulation nor plans to implement Basel III in the EU take this interdependence into account. Both treat government bonds of member states as risk-free, highly liquid assets and exclude them from capital requirements and large exposure regimes. Future EU banking regulations should aim to remedy this.
Consequently, EU government bonds could be given risk weights specific to each country. At least in the euro area, however, a strict limitation of bank investments to cross-border sovereign debt without country-specific risk would be more effective. The advantage of this reform is that it could be integrated into a variety of scenarios for future government refinancing in the euro area.

Links

Wochenbericht 42/2012(PDF, 0.7 MB)

O-Ton von Sören Radde
EU-Bankenregulierung muss das Problem des Home Bias bei Staatsanleihen ernst nehmen - Fünf Fragen an Sören Radde
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