Working Paper

The Long-Term Effects of Capital Requirements

Gianni De Nicolò, Nataliya Klimenko, Sebastian Pfeil, Jean-Charles Rochet
CESifo, Munich, 2021

CESifo Working Paper No. 9115

We build a stylized dynamic general equilibrium model with financial frictions to analyze costs and benefits of capital requirements in the short-term and long-term. We show that since increasing capital requirements limits the aggregate loan supply, the equilibrium loan rate spread increases, which raises bank profitability and the market-to-book value of bank capital. Hence, banks build up larger capital buffers which (i) lowers the public losses in case of a systemic crisis and (ii) restores the banking sector’s lending capacity after the short-term credit crunch induced by tighter regulation. We confirm our model’s dynamic implications in a panel VAR estimation, which suggests that bank lending has even increased in the long-run after the implementation of Basel III capital regulation.

CESifo Category
Monetary Policy and International Finance
Empirical and Theoretical Methods
Keywords: bank capital requirements, credit crunch, systemic risk
JEL Classification: E210, E320, F440, G210, G280