The Long-Term Economic Impact of Higher Capital Levels
The Long-Term Economic Impact of Higher Capital Levels
The Long-Term Economic Impact of Higher Capital Levels
1. Introduction
The 2007–08 financial crisis exposed the inadequacy of existing prudential regulatory
arrangements, spurring various initiatives for reform.2 One of the main lessons from the crisis
was that the banking system held insufficient capital. A key question for policymakers is how
much more capital the system should have. This paper presents a framework for assessing
the long-run costs and benefits of increasing capital requirements for the economy. It
provides background to the analysis presented in Bank of England (2010).
To determine the benefits, we model the banking sector as a portfolio of credit risks, and
present a framework for assessing how the likelihood of a systemic banking crisis depends
on the level of capital requirements. On costs, we assume that higher capital requirements
increase banks’ funding costs. Customers’ borrowing costs rise; leading to a fall in
investment and the economic stock of capital, thereby reducing the long-run level of GDP.
Here, our key assumption is that Modigliani-Miller’s theorem (Modigliani and Miller (1958))
does not hold in its pure form. If it did hold, variations in a bank’s capital structure would not
affect its funding costs. But real-world frictions may imply that funding costs depend on the
composition of liabilities. To make our analysis robust against such frictions, we assume that
banks’ funding costs increase when they increase the share of capital among their liabilities.
We provide some indicative bounds to our estimates using a range of different assumptions.
We provide an illustrative quantification of this framework and find that even when
Modigliani-Miller’s theorem does not hold, there is significant scope for increasing capital
requirements. This is primarily because the steady-state costs of higher capital requirements
are low, while the benefits can be substantial. Appropriate capital requirements appear to lie
somewhere between 10% and 15% of risk-weighted assets, and substantially above that if
the costs lie towards the lower bound and the benefits towards the upper bounds of our
estimates.3
Importantly, we do not attempt to calibrate minimum capital requirements (below which the
bank would enter resolution arrangements) but a “cycle-neutral” level of capital – the amount
of capital banks would be expected to hold on average over the economic cycle. The main
difference between the two concepts is that the minimum is not designed to ensure a bank’s
viability, but instead to protect creditors from losses once the bank has entered an insolvency
regime. This minimum requirement needs to be complemented by an additional buffer of
capital that can both be used to absorb unexpected losses and allow banks to maintain
lending to the real economy. Figure 1 illustrates these concepts.
1
The views expressed in this paper are those of the authors, and not necessarily those of the Bank of England.
2
Various international committees provided for the discussion of these issues, with the Basel Committee on
Banking Supervision playing a key role on the capital and liquidity adequacy front.
3
These figures do not take into account the Basel III increases in risk-weighted assets.
BIS Papers No 60 73
Figure 1
Schematic representation of components
of capital requirements
2. Related literature
A number of recent studies have discussed the costs and benefits of higher capital
requirements. As in this paper, some focused on the steady-state impact at a point after the
banks and the wider economy are assumed to have adjusted to the revised requirements
(eg BCBS (2010)); others on the impact during the transition phase to the new requirements
(eg BCBS and FSB (2010)).
Among these papers, BCBS (2010) is closest to the analysis contained here. To estimate the
costs of higher capital requirements, BCBS (2010) follows a similar framework to the one
presented in Section 3 of this paper. To estimate the benefits, BCBS (2010) again follows the
same steps as we do, but presents the results of a broader range of models to assess the link
between capital requirements and the likelihood of systemic crises. We differ from BCBS
(2010) in that our analysis focuses on the United Kingdom, which is simpler and more
transparent, and because we investigate the costs of higher capital requirements in more
detail.
74 BIS Papers No 60
Other comprehensive cost-benefit analyses include Barrell et al (2009), Kato et al (2010),
and Miles et al (2011). The first two studies analyse the effect of varying both liquidity and
capital requirements. The third also focuses on capital requirements. Its estimates of
appropriate capital ratios are larger, primarily because Miles et al use a different method to
calibrate the volatility of banks’ assets. It also takes into account the impact of lower leverage
on risk-adjusted returns, but this is quantitatively less important. Using a different approach,
Kashyap et al (2010) also conclude that the long-run costs of increasing capital requirements
are likely to be small.
A number of studies investigate specific elements of the cost-benefit analysis. Using a
method close to the one we employ, Elliott (2009, 2010) studies the long-run effect of
tightening capital requirements on banks’ lending spreads in the United States. Elliott’s
analysis suggests that these effects are small, in particular if banks are able to offset any
increase in their funding costs by other means. King (2011) uses a similar method to
investigate the long-run impact of tighter capital and liquidity requirements on bank lending
spreads for 13 OECD countries.
4
The qualification “over a wide range” results from the observation that some bank debt (deposits held for
transaction purposes) has value not only as a funding instrument, but also as a means for providing liquidity
insurance to households and firms. Replacing this by equity could inhibit the payment for and settlement of
goods and services and affect the overall level of maturity transformation in the economy. In this paper, we
consider variations in capital requirements that would only substitute between equity and debt held for savings
purposes.
BIS Papers No 60 75
3.2 Translating higher bank lending spreads into GDP
The long-run impact of higher bank lending spreads on GDP can be assessed using a simple
production function. In this framework, an increase in non-financial firms’ cost of capital
reduces their investment and, ultimately, the level of GDP. Using a constant elasticity of
substitution production function, the elasticity of output with respect to firms’ cost of capital is
σ x α / (α – 1), where σ, the elasticity of substitution between capital and labour, is taken to
be 0.4, and α, the output elasticity of capital, is taken to be 0.3.5 As bank lending represents
only part of firms’ total external financing, firms’ overall cost of capital is likely to rise by only
about a third of the increase in banks’ lending spreads. A 7.4 bp increase in bank funding
costs raises firms’ cost of capital – here taken to be 10% – by 7.4 bp / 3 = 2.5 bp or about
0.25%.6 This suggests that output might fall by about 0.25% x σ x α / (α – 1), or 0.04%. That
is, a 7.4 basis point increase in lending spreads maps into a 0.04% permanent decline in the
level of GDP under these assumptions.
5
Our estimate of α is in line with the literature. See Barnes et al (2008) for estimates of σ.
6
That is, (10% + 2.5 bp) / 10% –1 = 0.25%.
7
Our model has been developed by Webber and Willison (2011).
76 BIS Papers No 60
their asset values are correlated; and (ii) direct balance sheet links between banks, through
which the failure of one bank can cause the contagious failure of other institutions.
We assume that a bank fails if its capital ratio approaches the Basel II minimum of 4%; for
purposes of illustration only, a 2 percentage point buffer is used. The model is calibrated
using 2007 data for the five largest UK banks, with a systemic crisis defined as the joint
default of at least two of these banks.8 Figure 2 shows the predicted link between the
probability of a crisis and the risk-weighted capital ratio.
Figure 2
Probability of systemic crises
8
Including other UK banks in the model is unlikely to affect the precision of our estimates materially, because
the banks in our sample cover the vast majority of lending to UK households and businesses.
BIS Papers No 60 77
Figure 3
Output paths
Table 1
Plausible bounds for appropriate capital requirements
Even when comparing very pessimistic (low) benefit estimates with pessimistic (high) cost
estimates, the results suggest that appropriate capital ratios should be in excess of 11% of
risk-weighted assets: at 11%, the benefits (4% of GDP) exceed the costs (3% of GDP).
When comparing the midpoints, the results suggest that an appropriate capital ratio might lie
in excess of 14% of risk-weighted assets.
78 BIS Papers No 60
5.2 Banks’ losses in past crises
As mentioned previously, the structural approach that we used to assess costs and benefits
presents only one of several methods that can be used for a cost-benefit analysis. One way
of checking whether our results are broadly sensible is to ask how much capital banks would
have needed to survive past crises.
Evidence from such crises suggests that banks typically make losses equivalent to about 5%
of risk-weighted assets (Figure 4).9 But these numbers are likely to be underestimates for
several reasons: government support substantially reduces realised losses; there is
survivorship bias because losses at failed banks are usually not included; and mark to
market losses during the crisis are likely to be substantially higher than the losses that are
finally recorded in published accounts.
Figure 4
Cumulative peak losses as a percentage
of risk-weighted assets at the start of the crisis
Finally, the numbers take no account of the fact that additional capital is required to maintain
a sufficient amount of lending to the real economy during a downturn. For example, to
maintain growth in risk-weighted assets of 8% per year for five years after the start of a crisis,
banks would need an additional buffer of about 3% of risk-weighted assets.10 This back-of-
the-envelope calculation suggests that banks would need to hold a capital cushion of about
7–8% above their viability threshold. These figures are broadly consistent with our illustration
of our cost-benefit framework.
9
Figure 4 includes only those banks that incurred losses. Each shaded band shows 5% (between the 5th and
95th percentiles) of the support of the interpolated distribution across banks. The diamond shows the median.
Start of crisis defined as a year before a bank incurred a loss (defined as net income after tax and before
distributions). UK figures based on the major loss-making UK banks.
10
Over five years, loans would grow by (1 + 0.08) x 5 – 1 = 45% of risk-weighted assets. If 6% of this is funded
with capital, the required additional capital is about 3% of risk-weighted assets.
BIS Papers No 60 79
6. Conclusion
Two key insights can be taken from this paper. First, loss-absorbing capital is only a small
proportion of banks’ balance sheets. Increasing this proportion to 10–15% does not
materially affect a bank’s average cost of funding in the steady state, even if Modigliani-
Miller’s theorem does not hold. The second is that the net benefits of higher capitalisation
can be substantial.
The estimates are subject to substantial uncertainties, in particular on the benefit side. But
insurance against systemic banking crises (in the form of higher capital ratios) appears to be
comparatively cheap in steady state, and the cost of crises is large.
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