Prudential regulations for greening the financial system: Coping with climate disasters

Prudential financial regulators, central banks, and regulatory authorities have increasingly come to recognize that they have a role to play in dealing with climate change, including climate disasters such as storms, tornados, tsunamis, and so on. Such climate events impact the real economy by destr...

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Main Author: Daniel M. Schydlowsky
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2020-01-01
Series:Latin American Journal of Central Banking
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2666143820300107
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spelling doaj-46380d1f7e5f4194bc416bcec7fd9f252021-06-10T04:57:11ZengElsevierLatin American Journal of Central Banking2666-14382020-01-0111100010Prudential regulations for greening the financial system: Coping with climate disastersDaniel M. Schydlowsky0Global Development Policy Center, Boston University, United States; Pardee School and Department of Economics, Boston University, United States; Jerusalem School of Business, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, United States; David Rockefeller Center for Latin American Studies, Harvard University, United States; Superintendente de Banca, Seguros y AFPs, Peru; Correspondence address: Global Development Policy Center, Boston University, United States.Prudential financial regulators, central banks, and regulatory authorities have increasingly come to recognize that they have a role to play in dealing with climate change, including climate disasters such as storms, tornados, tsunamis, and so on. Such climate events impact the real economy by destroying physical assets, income opportunities, credit worthiness, and the fiscal base. In turn, the financial system is impacted by destruction of collateral and of the ability to pay, an increase in defaults, required insurance payouts, and a flip in the fiscal balance. Regulators’ policy options can usefully be classified into those that provide direct support, promote supporting responses by the system, protect from the effects, and prevent the consequences as much as possible. Regulators also have a role to play in turning prospective (and past) climate disasters into an advantage by inducing assets to become more resistant in the face of climate change, supporting technological change, and supporting behavioral change. Specific regulatory policy toward climate disasters involves some general climate change–related regulations, such as requiring improved building codes for writing mortgages, but also includes prepositioning regulations to become activated in the climate emergency and a second set to become activated in the recovery period. Fortunately, the regulatory instruments involved are all well within the current established practice.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2666143820300107
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Daniel M. Schydlowsky
spellingShingle Daniel M. Schydlowsky
Prudential regulations for greening the financial system: Coping with climate disasters
Latin American Journal of Central Banking
author_facet Daniel M. Schydlowsky
author_sort Daniel M. Schydlowsky
title Prudential regulations for greening the financial system: Coping with climate disasters
title_short Prudential regulations for greening the financial system: Coping with climate disasters
title_full Prudential regulations for greening the financial system: Coping with climate disasters
title_fullStr Prudential regulations for greening the financial system: Coping with climate disasters
title_full_unstemmed Prudential regulations for greening the financial system: Coping with climate disasters
title_sort prudential regulations for greening the financial system: coping with climate disasters
publisher Elsevier
series Latin American Journal of Central Banking
issn 2666-1438
publishDate 2020-01-01
description Prudential financial regulators, central banks, and regulatory authorities have increasingly come to recognize that they have a role to play in dealing with climate change, including climate disasters such as storms, tornados, tsunamis, and so on. Such climate events impact the real economy by destroying physical assets, income opportunities, credit worthiness, and the fiscal base. In turn, the financial system is impacted by destruction of collateral and of the ability to pay, an increase in defaults, required insurance payouts, and a flip in the fiscal balance. Regulators’ policy options can usefully be classified into those that provide direct support, promote supporting responses by the system, protect from the effects, and prevent the consequences as much as possible. Regulators also have a role to play in turning prospective (and past) climate disasters into an advantage by inducing assets to become more resistant in the face of climate change, supporting technological change, and supporting behavioral change. Specific regulatory policy toward climate disasters involves some general climate change–related regulations, such as requiring improved building codes for writing mortgages, but also includes prepositioning regulations to become activated in the climate emergency and a second set to become activated in the recovery period. Fortunately, the regulatory instruments involved are all well within the current established practice.
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2666143820300107
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