The potential impact of Basel IV requirements on performance and resilience of commercial banks in Africa.
Date
2020
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Abstract
Capital adequacy is considered an important determinant for the performance and
resilience of banks because the banking sector plays a substantial role in the stability and
growth of the economy. Literature shows that well-capitalised banks are associated with
higher profits. Banks in Africa have revenue growth opportunities, but fragility and
vulnerability to bank failures arising from capital inadequacy, non-performing loans and
weak banking regulatory requirements restrict their lending capacities to support
economic growth. The Basel Committee’s aim for introducing higher Basel capital
requirements is to strengthen the resilience of the banking system; however, most of the
African countries are slow in embracing changes in Basel regulatory requirements.
Nevertheless, the implementation of higher Basel capital may affect the performance and
lending ability of banks. This study examines the potential impact of Basel IV capital
requirements on performance, lending, securitisation, and resilience of commercial banks
from selected African countries.
To achieve the set objectives, the study simulates Basel IV capital ratio using historical
data from 2000 and 2018 because the implementation of Basel IV capital requirements
has not commenced. In this context, the study created sample-representative banks and
employed static and dynamic panel regression analyses as the estimation techniques.
The results suggest that Basel IV capital requirements portend short-term negative
impacts on bank performance and lending, while the long-term impact on bank
performance is favourable. In addition, the findings show that higher capital requirements
have a significant impact on the volume of securitisation and protect the banks from
securitisation exposures; however, increasing volume of securitisation does not impact
performance. Finally, capital adequacy positively impacts bank resilience and suggests
that banks with a low level of capital are prone to banking distress, while banks with high
capital improves resilience.
Description
Doctoral Degree. University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban.