The Bank for International
Settlements (BIS) established on 17 May 1930,is the world's oldest
international financial organisation. The BIS has 60 member central
banks, representing countries from around the world that together make
up about 95% of world GDP.The head office is in Basel,Switzerland and
there are two representative offices: in the Hong Kong Special
Administrative Region of the People's, Republic of China and in Mexico
City.
The
mission of the BIS is to serve central banks of different of nations in
their pursuit of monetary and financial stability, to foster
international cooperation in those areas and to act as a bank for central banks.The
Basel Committee is the primary global standard setter for the
prudential regulation of banks and provides a forum for cooperation on
banking supervisory matters.
NORMS ISSUED BY BIS
Basel I
In 1988,The Basel Committee on Banking Supervision (BCBS)
introduced capital measurement system called Basel capital accord,also
called as Basel 1. It focused almost entirely on credit risk. It defined
capital and structure of risk weights for banks. The minimum capital
requirement was fixed at 8% of risk weighted assets (RWA). RWA means
assets with different risk profiles. For example, an asset backed by
collateral would carry lesser risks as compared to personal loans, which
have no collateral. India adopted Basel 1 guidelines in 1999.The Basel I
Accord, issued in 1988, has succeeded in raising the total level of
equity capital in the system.Like many regulations, it also pushed
unintended consequences; because it does not differentiate risks very
well, it perversely encouraged risk seeking. It also promoted the loan
securitization that led to the unwinding in the subprime market.
Basel II
In June 1999, the Committee issued a
proposal for a new capital adequacy framework to replace the 1988
Accord. This led to the release of the Revised Capital Framework in June
2004. Generally known as‟Basel II”, the revised framework comprised
three pillars, namely minimum capital, supervisor review and market
Minimum capital is the technical,
quantitative heart of the accord.Banks must hold capital against 8% of
their assets, after adjusting their assets for risk.Supervisor review is
the process whereby national regulators ensure their home country banks
are following the rules. If minimum capital is the rule book, the
second pillar is the referee system.Market discipline is based on
enhanced disclosure of risk. This may be an important pillar due to the
complexity of Basel. Under Basel II, banks may use their own internal
models (and gain lower capital requirements) but the price of this is
transparency.
Basel III
Even before Lehman Brothers
collapsed in September 2008, the need for a fundamental strengthening of
the Basel II framework had become apparent.The banking sector had
entered the financial crisis with too much leverage and inadequate
liquidity buffers.Responding to these risk factors, the Basel Committee
issued Principles for sound liquidity risk management and supervision in
the same month that Lehman Brothers failed. In July 2009, the Committee
issued a further package of documents to strengthen the Basel
II capital framework, notably with regard to the treatment of certain
complex securitisation positions, off balance sheet vehicles and
trading book exposures. In September 2010, the Group of Governors and
Heads of Supervision announced higher global minimum capital standards
for commercial banks. This followed an agreement reached in July
regarding the overall design of the capital and liquidity reform
package, now referred to as“Basel III”.
INDIA AND BASEL NORMS:
- Presently indian banking system folllows basel II norms.
- The Reserve Bank of India has extended the timeline for full implementation of the Basel III capital regulations by a year to march 31,2019.March 31, 2019.
- Around 10 public sector banks (PSBs) will get a total capital infusion of Rs 12,517 crore from the government before this financial year ends.
- Government of India is scaling disinvesting their holdings in PSBs to 52 per cent.
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