Current Approaches to the Establishment of Credit Risk Specific Provisions
The aim of the new Basel II and IFRS approaches is to make the operations of financial institutions more transparent and thus to create a better basis for the market participants and supervisory authorities to acquire information and make decisions. In the banking sector, a continuous debate is bein...
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General Association of Economists from Romania
2008-10-01
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doaj-6ef57de44c75489cb378482e615b1a632020-11-24T21:11:10ZengGeneral Association of Economists from RomaniaTheoretical and Applied Economics1841-86781844-00292008-10-01XV1018418678Current Approaches to the Establishment of Credit Risk Specific ProvisionsIon Nitu0Alin Eduard Nitu1Eliza Paicu2 Academy of Economic Studies, Bucharest The aim of the new Basel II and IFRS approaches is to make the operations of financial institutions more transparent and thus to create a better basis for the market participants and supervisory authorities to acquire information and make decisions. In the banking sector, a continuous debate is being led, related to the similarities and differences between IFRS approach on loan loss provisions and Basel II approach on calculating the capital requirements, judging against the classical method regarding loan provisions, currently used by the Romanian banks following the Central Bank’s regulations.Banks must take into consideration that IFRS and Basel II objectives are fundamentally different. While IFRS aims to ensure that the financial papers reflect adequately the losses recorded at each balance sheet date, the Basel II objective is to ensure that the bank has enough provisions or capital in order to face expected losses in the next 12 months and eventual unexpected losses.Consequently, there are clear differences between the objectives of the two models. Basel II works on statistical modeling of expected losses while IFRS, although allowing statistical models, requires a trigger event to have occurred before they can be used. IAS 39 specifically states that losses that are expected as a result of future events, no matter how likely, are not recognized. This is a clear and fundamental area of difference between the two frameworks. http://store.ectap.ro/articole/342.pdf IFRSBasel IIBasel II targetsprovisiondepreciation lossexpected/unexpected losshistorical lossdepreciation indexessignificance threshold |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Ion Nitu Alin Eduard Nitu Eliza Paicu |
spellingShingle |
Ion Nitu Alin Eduard Nitu Eliza Paicu Current Approaches to the Establishment of Credit Risk Specific Provisions Theoretical and Applied Economics IFRS Basel II Basel II targets provision depreciation loss expected/unexpected loss historical loss depreciation indexes significance threshold |
author_facet |
Ion Nitu Alin Eduard Nitu Eliza Paicu |
author_sort |
Ion Nitu |
title |
Current Approaches to the Establishment of Credit Risk Specific Provisions |
title_short |
Current Approaches to the Establishment of Credit Risk Specific Provisions |
title_full |
Current Approaches to the Establishment of Credit Risk Specific Provisions |
title_fullStr |
Current Approaches to the Establishment of Credit Risk Specific Provisions |
title_full_unstemmed |
Current Approaches to the Establishment of Credit Risk Specific Provisions |
title_sort |
current approaches to the establishment of credit risk specific provisions |
publisher |
General Association of Economists from Romania |
series |
Theoretical and Applied Economics |
issn |
1841-8678 1844-0029 |
publishDate |
2008-10-01 |
description |
The aim of the new Basel II and IFRS approaches is to make the
operations of financial institutions more transparent and thus to create a better
basis for the market participants and supervisory authorities to acquire
information and make decisions. In the banking sector, a continuous debate is
being led, related to the similarities and differences between IFRS approach
on loan loss provisions and Basel II approach on calculating the capital
requirements, judging against the classical method regarding loan provisions,
currently used by the Romanian banks following the Central Bank’s regulations.Banks must take into consideration that IFRS and Basel II objectives are
fundamentally different. While IFRS aims to ensure that the financial papers
reflect adequately the losses recorded at each balance sheet date, the Basel II
objective is to ensure that the bank has enough provisions or capital in order
to face expected losses in the next 12 months and eventual unexpected losses.Consequently, there are clear differences between the objectives of the two
models. Basel II works on statistical modeling of expected losses while IFRS,
although allowing statistical models, requires a trigger event to have occurred
before they can be used. IAS 39 specifically states that losses that are expected
as a result of future events, no matter how likely, are not recognized. This is a
clear and fundamental area of difference between the two frameworks. |
topic |
IFRS Basel II Basel II targets provision depreciation loss expected/unexpected loss historical loss depreciation indexes significance threshold |
url |
http://store.ectap.ro/articole/342.pdf
|
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AT ionnitu currentapproachestotheestablishmentofcreditriskspecificprovisions AT alineduardnitu currentapproachestotheestablishmentofcreditriskspecificprovisions AT elizapaicu currentapproachestotheestablishmentofcreditriskspecificprovisions |
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