Basel II: Challenges Ahead of The Indian Banking Industry
Basel II: Challenges Ahead of The Indian Banking Industry
Banking Industry
13 FEB 2010 3 Comments
by Malvaniya Prashant in Uncategorized
About Basel II
Basel II is a type of recommendations on banking laws and regulations issued by the Basel
Committee on Banking Supervision that was initially published in June 2004. The objective
of Basel II is to create an international standard that banking regulators can use when
creating regulations about how much capital banks need to put aside to guard against the
types of financial and operational risks banks face.
History of Basel
The Basel Committee was constituted by the Central Bank Governors of the G-10 countries in
1974. The G-10 Committee consists of members from Belgium, Canada, France, Germany,
Italy, Japan, Luxembourg, The Netherlands, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, The UK and The
US. These countries are represented by their Central Bank and also by the authority with
onus for the prudent supervision of banking business where this is not the central bank.
The Committee’s Secretariat is located at the Bank for International Settlements in Basel,
Switzerland. This committee meets four times in a year. The present Chairman of this
committee is Mr. Nout Wellink (President of The Netherlands Bank). The Secretary General
of the Basel Committee is Mr. Stefan Walter.
This committee on banking supervision provides a forum for regular cooperation on banking
supervisory matters. Its objective is to enhance understanding of key supervisory issues and
quality improvement of banking supervision worldwide. This committee is best known for its
international standards on capital adequacy; the core principles of banking supervision and
the concordat on cross-border banking supervision.
The Basel Capital Accord (Basel II) guidelines promulgated by the BIS to establish capital
adequacy requirements and supervisory standards for banks to be implemented by 2007 and
are structured by three pillars.
The Basel II is designed to facilitate a more comprehensive, sophisticated and risk sensitive
approach for banks to calculate regulatory capital. The proposals will enable banks to align
regulatory requirements more closely with their internal risk measurement and to improve
operational process.
The Committee today consists of central bankers and supervisory regulators from 13
countries.
Advantages of Basel-II
It is believed that such an international standard can help protect the international financial
system from the types of problems that might arise should a major bank or a series of banks
collapse. In practice, Basel II attempts to accomplish this by setting up rigorous risk and
capital management requirements designed to ensure that a bank holds capital reserves
appropriate to the risk the bank exposes itself to through its lending and investment
practices. In simple terms, the greater risk to which the bank is exposed, the greater the
amount of capital the bank needs to hold to safeguard its solvency and overall economic
stability.
The basic purpose of this recommendation is to ensure that capital allocation is more risk
sensitive, separating operational risk from credit risk and quantifying both, and attempting
to align economic and regulatory capital more closely to reduce the scope for regulatory
arbitrage.
In a nut-shell, Basel II -
• Provides effective assessment methods.
• Incorporates sensitivity to banks.
• Makes better business standards.
• Reduces losses to the banks.
The above-mentioned advantages of Basel II recommendation are helpful in various ways to
the Indian banking industry: -
• Improving overall efficiency of banking and finance systems.
• Takes global aspect into consideration for more rational decision making, improving the
decision matrix for banks.
• Allowing capital discrimination of the banking system by allocating proper risk weighs to
each asset class.
• Providing range of alternatives to choose from.
• Allowing capital allocation based on ratings of the borrower making capital more risk-
sensitive.
• Providing an incentive for better and more objective risk measurement.
• Encouraging mergers and acquisitions and more collaboration on the part of the banks, this
ultimately leads to proper control over their capital and assets.
Conclusion
The Basel Committee on Banking Supervision is a Guideline for Computing Capital for
Incremental Risk. It is a new way of managing risk and asset-liability mis-matches, like asset
securitization, which unlocks resources and spreads risk, are likely to be increasingly used.
This was designed for the big banks in the BCBS member countries, not for smaller or less
developed economies.
The major challenge the country’s financial system faces today is to bring informal loans into
the formal financial system. By implementing Basel II norms, our formal banking system can
learn many lessons from money-lenders. Its implementation may involve significant changes
in business model in which potential economic impacts must be carefully monitored.
In a nut-shell, we would like to conclude that keeping in view the cost of compliance for both
banks and supervisors, the regulatory challenge would be to migrate to Basel II in a non-
disruptive manner. We would like to continue the process of interaction with other countries
to learn from their experiences through various international fora. India is one of the early
countries which subjected itself voluntarily to the FSAP of the IMF, and our system was
assessed to be in high compliance with the relevant principles. With the gradual and
purposeful implementation of the banking sector reforms over the past decade, the Indian
banking system has shown significant improvement on various parameters, has become
robust and displayed ample resilience to shocks in the economy. There is, therefore, ample
evidence of the capacity of the Indian banking system to migrate smoothly to Basel II.