9 octobre 2020

Base Documentaire : Soft Law

Référence complète: Financial Stability Board, The Use of Supervisory and Regulatory Technology by Authorities and Regulated Institutions. Market Developments and Stability Implications, Rapport du 9 octobre 2020, 36 p. 

Lire le rapport (en anglais)

Lire la présentation que fait le Financial Stability Board de ce rapport (en anglais)

Pour aller plus loin sur la question de l'usage des nouvelles technologies dans les processus de régulation, lire le document de travail de Marie-Anne Frison-Roche: Analyse des blockchains au regard des usages qu'elles peuvent remplir et des fonctions que les officiers ministériels doivent assurer

16 janvier 2020

Base Documentaire : Doctrine

Référence complète: Bolton, P., Desprez, L.A, Pereira da Silva, F., Samama, F., Swartzman, The green swan: central banking and financial stability in the age of climate change, Banque des Règlements Internationaux, Janvier 2020.

Lire l'ouvrage (disponible en format numérique)

Accéder à l'analyse de l'ouvrage réalisé par la Banque de France, le mettant en corrélation avec la crise sanitairer du Coronavirus

Lire le document de travail élaboré par Amundi à propos de l'ouvrage

 

Résumé (fait par les auteurs) :

"Climate change poses new challenges to central banks, regulators and supervisors. This book reviews ways of addressing these new risks within central banks’ financial stability mandate. However, integrating climate-related risk analysis into financial stability monitoring is particularly challenging because of the radical uncertainty associated with a physical, social and economic phenomenon that is constantly changing and involves complex dynamics and chain reactions. Traditional backward-looking risk assessments and existing climate-economic models cannot anticipate accurately enough the form that climate-related risks will take. These include what we call “green swan” risks: potentially extremely financially disruptive events that could be behind the next systemic financial crisis. Central banks have a role to play in avoiding such an outcome, including by seeking to improve their understanding of climaterelated risks through the development of forward-looking scenario-based analysis. But central banks alone cannot mitigate climate change. This complex collective action problem requires coordinating actions among many players including governments, the private sector, civil society and the international community. Central banks can therefore have an additional role to play in helping coordinate the measures to fight climate change. Those include climate mitigation policies such as carbon pricing, the integration of sustainability into financial practices and accounting frameworks, the search for appropriate policy mixes, and the development of new financial mechanisms at the international level. All these actions will be complex to coordinate and could have significant redistributive consequences that should be adequately handled, yet they are essential to preserve long-term financial (and price) stability in the age of climate change."