Competition Among Regulators

Volume/Issue: Volume 2001 Issue 073
Publication date: May 2001
ISBN: 9781451849462
$20.00
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Topics covered in this book

This title contains information about the following subjects. Click on a subject if you would like to see other titles with the same subjects.

Banks and Banking , Finance , WP , banking system , Externalities , banking regulation , financial integration , centralized regulator , bank regulator , equilibrium regulation level , central regulator , independent regulator , regulation k , benevolent regulator , national regulator , Commercial banks , Bank soundness , Foreign banks , Competition , Europe

Summary

This paper shows that competition among regulators reduces regulatory standards relative to a centralized solution. It suggests that a central regulator is more likely to emerge for homogeneous and financially integrated countries. The paper proves these results in a model where regulators concerned with their banking system’s stability and efficiency and with their banks’ profitability set their regulatory policy non-cooperatively. Externalities in bank regulation make the independent solution collectively inefficient. These externalities and the benefits of centralized regulation increase with financial integration, while the costs associated with the loss of independence decrease with the homogeneity of the countries involved.