This book analyzes the impact of Basel Accord in Bangladesh. More
specifically, it focuses on the credit risk homogenization under
standardized approach of Basel Accord where External Credit Rating
Agencies (ECAIs) are allowed to rate the exposures, the potential risk
of allowing sub-ordinated debt (Sub-debt) as Tier 2 capital, and
multiple bank distress cases as a real-world scenarios.
In doing so, the book explores why the ECAIs rating fail to capture the
real credit risk of exposure and to what extent sub-debt is reliable as
regulatory capital. With that, the book's scope is categorized into
three tracts (i) analyzes the ECAIs incentive and sanction issues from
institutional economics perspective (ii) discusses the ill-impact of
Naïve adoption of sub-ordinated debt as regulatory capital and its
associated risk on financial system, and (iii) providing readers an
empirical illustrations of bank distress when an economy tapped into
institutional failures in the above-mentioned tracts (i) and (ii).