Working Paper
A Tale of Two Policies: Prudential Regulation and Monetary Policy with Fragile Banks
We introduce banks, modeled as in Diamond and Rajan (JoF 2000 or JPE 2001), into a
standard DSGE model and use this framework to study the role of banks in the transmission of
shocks, the effects of monetary policy when banks are exposed to runs, and the interplay between
monetary policy and Basel-like capital ratios. In equilibrium, bank leverage depends positively
on the uncertainty of projects and on the bank’s "relationship lender" skills, and negatively on
short term interest rates. A monetary restriction reduces leverage, while a productivity or asset
price boom increases it. Procyclical capital ratios are destabilising; monetary policy can only
partly offset this effect. The best policy combination includes mildly anticyclical capital ratios
and a response of monetary policy to asset prices or leverage.
Key Words
- bank runs
- capital requirements
- combination policy
- leverage
- market liquidity