Banking Sector Fragility and Systemic Sources of Fragility
42 Pages Posted: 15 Feb 2006
Date Written: February 1996
Abstract
A theoretical framework to assess the degree of fragility or, inversely, the soundness of the banking system is proposed. It is argued that, while a bank may be either solvent or insolvent at any given time, its degree of fragility must be a forward-looking measure based on the probability that it can withstand a destabilizing shock. Externalities are particularly important because they can constitute a serious source of systemic risk. The factors that determine banks` soundness can be separated into bank-specific and those common to all banks (subject to microprudential and macroprudential considerations, respectively). The interconnection between banking crises and currency crises (in both directions) is also discussed.
JEL Classification: D81, D82, F31, G21
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?
Recommended Papers
-
The Determinants of Banking Crises: Evidence from Developing and Developed Countries
-
Looting: The Economic Underworld of Bankruptcy for Profit
By George A. Akerlof and Paul M. Romer
-
Does the Structure of Production Affect Demand for Schooling in Peru?
-
The Nordic Banking Crises: Pitfalls in Financial Liberalization?
By Burkhard Drees and Ceyla Pazarba_1olu
-
Understanding Financial Crises: A Developing Country Perspective
-
Costs of Banking System Instability: Some Empirical Evidence
By Glenn Hoggarth, Ricardo Reis, ...
-
The Determinants of Banking Crises: Evidence from Industrial and Developing Countries
-
Liquidity Crises in Emerging Markets: Theory and Policy
By Roberto Chang and Andrés Velasco