Systemic Risk in Global Banking: What Can Available Data Tell Us and What More Data are Needed?
26 Pages Posted: 12 Apr 2012
Date Written: April 1, 2012
Abstract
The recent financial crisis has shown how interconnected the financial world has become. Shocks in one location or asset class can have a sizable impact on the stability of institutions and markets around the world. But systemic risk analysis is severely hampered by the lack of consistent data that capture the international dimensions of finance. While currently available data can be used more effectively, supervisors and other agencies need more and better data to construct even rudimentary measures of risks in the international financial system. Similarly, market participants need better information on aggregate positions and linkages to appropriately monitor and price risks. Ongoing initiatives that will help close data gaps include the G20 Data Gaps Initiative, which recommends the collection of consistent bank level data for joint analyses and enhancements to existing sets of aggregate statistics, and enhancements to the BIS international banking statistics.
Keywords: systemic risks, banking system, international, contagion, vulnerabilities
JEL Classification: F21, F34, G15, G18, Y1
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?
Recommended Papers
-
The US Dollar Shortage in Global Banking
By Patrick Mcguire, Goetz Von Peter, ...
-
Banking Globalization, Monetary Transmission, and the Lending Channel
-
The US Dollar Shortage in Global Banking and the International Policy Response
By Patrick Mcguire and Goetz Von Peter
-
Interpreting Deviations from Covered Interest Parity during the Financial Market Turmoil of 2007-08
By Naohiko Baba and Frank Packer
-
Interpreting Deviations from Covered Interest Parity During the Financial Market Turmoil of 2007-08
By Naohiko Baba and Frank Packer
-
US Dollar Money Market Funds and Non-US Banks
By Naohiko Baba, Robert N. Mccauley, ...
-
By Naohiko Baba and Frank Packer
-
Global Banks and International Shock Transmission: Evidence from the Crisis
-
Global Banks and International Shock Transmission: Evidence from the Crisis
