Credit risk transfer and financial sector performance
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Authors
Wagner, Wolf
Marsh, Ian
Publication Date
2004Series
CFAP Working Paper
13
Publisher
CFAP, Cambridge Judge Business School, University of Cambridge
Language
English
Type
Working Paper
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Wagner, W., & Marsh, I. (2004). Credit risk transfer and financial sector performance. http://www.dspace.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/225170
Abstract
In this paper we study the impact of credit risk transfer (CRT) on the stability and the efficiency of a financial system in a model with endogenous intermediation and production. Our analysis suggests that with respect to CRT, the individual incentives of the agents in the economy are generally aligned with social incentives. Hence, CRT does not pose a systematic challenge to the functioning of the financial system and is generally welfare enhancing. However, we identify issues that should be addressed by the regulatory authorities in order to minimize the potential costs of CRT. These include: ensuring the development of new methods of CRT that allow risk to be more perfectly transferred, setting regulatory standards that reflect differences in the social cost of instability in the banking and insurance sector; promoting CRT instruments that are nor detrimental to the monitoring incentives of banks.
Keywords
credit risk transfer, financial stability and efficiency, regulation
Identifiers
This record's URL: http://www.dspace.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/225170
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