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August 1997
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
| Financial Industry
Studies is no
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Are Capital Requirements Effective?
A Cautionary Tale from Pre-Depression Texas
Jeffery W. Gunther, Linda M. Hooks
and Kenneth J. Robinson
Capital requirements are now a primary ingredient
in efforts to supervise and regulate the banking industry. Their main
purpose is to protect the deposit insurance fund and to minimize taxpayer
exposure should financial difficulties occur. Capital requirements are
not new, however. Texas was one of the first states to institute formal
capital requirements when it introduced a deposit insurance program early
in the century. But this early attempt at capital regulation proved ineffective
in preventing a complete breakdown of the deposit insurance system it
was meant to protect. Using recently discovered examination data for Texas
banks operating in the troubled 1920s, we show that the capital requirements
were unsuccessful largely due to a reliance on book-value capital measures
that overstated the true financial condition of banks. As some researchers
have shown recently, the same types of problems confront current efforts
to rely on measures of capital as the focus of banking supervision. This
has led to recent proposals to restructure bank capital regulation, such
as the precommitment approach.![Read more about "Are Capital Requirements Effective? A Cautionary Tale from Pre-Depression Texas" [PDF]](../../images/more.gif)
Mexican Payments System Reforms
Sujit "Bob" Chakravorti
This article investigates the ongoing
payments system reforms begun by the Bank of Mexico in 1994.
The goals of these reforms are to reduce the amount of uncollateralized
intraday credit extended by the Bank of Mexico (previously
unlimited), to promote a market-based allocation of intraday
credit for interbank payments, and to move large-value paper-based
payments to electronic form. The Bank of Mexico has been successful
in achieving all of these goals to some extent. But despite
this progress, like other central banks around the world,
the Bank of Mexico still faces the possibility that government
guarantees may weaken market discipline in the payments system.
![Read more about "Mexican Payments System Reforms" [PDF]](../../images/more.gif)
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