shadow bank
English
editEtymology
editFrom shadow banking system.
Noun
editshadow bank (plural shadow banks)
- (banking, derogatory) An entity that illegally performs banking functions.
- 1991 July 23, “A Slam Heard 'Round the World; Closing of BCCI's Doors Leaves...”, in Washington Post:
- Regulators have said there was an entire shadow bank within the official BCCI with separate books.
- (banking, economics, finance) An entity not subject to banking regulation that performs banking functions.
- 2018 October 7, Shane Hickey, “Shadow banks, trade wars, Trump … clouds gather over the IMF’s paradise”, in The Observer[1]:
- The rise of unregulated “shadow banks” and the lack of restrictions on insurers and asset managers were pinpointed as concerns – as was the growth of global banks to a scale larger than 2008 and the fear that they are again “too big to fail”.
- 2020, Jon Nævdal Johansson, Macroprudential Policy Reviewed: An Economic Assessment of Implemented Macroprudential Policy Regimes Post the Great Recession, Department of Economics, University of Oslo, November 2020
- The results of the experiment show that the broad policy regime performs best, with the narrow Basel III regime actually working more procyclical than the standard regime when hit with a hypothetical shock. This is because of credit is forced through the shadow-bank channel when the standard bank channel is faced with countercyclical regulation.
Derived terms
editSee also
editFurther reading
edit- shadow banking system on Wikipedia.Wikipedia