Title: Financial Soundness Indicators: Recent Developments and Plans
1Financial Soundness Indicators Recent
Developments and Plans
OECD Working Party on Financial
Statistics Paris, October 24-27, 2011
- Manik Shrestha
- IMF Statistics Department
The views expressed herein are those of the
author and should not be attributed to the IMF,
its Executive Board, or its management.
2Background on FSI Work
- IMF started to work on developing Financial
Soundness Indicators (FSIs) together with
international community in early 2000 - A draft compilation guide was prepared in 2004
- Final version published in 2006
- Amendments to guide were introduced in 2007 to
enhance international comparability, particularly
for consolidation rules and the use of Basel
principles and IFRS for compiling underlying data
series - IMF launched online database of FSIs in July 2009
(http//fsi.imf.org/) - Includes data underlying FSIs, where available
3Scope of FSIs
- A list of 40 FSIs (approved by the IMFs
Executive Board) - 25 for deposit-takers (12 core and 13 encouraged
FSIs) - 2 for other financial corporations (encouraged)
- 5 for non-financial corporations (encouraged)
- 2 for households (encouraged)
- 2 for market liquidity (encouraged)
- 4 for real estate markets (encouraged)
- See Annex for a complete list and reporting status
4FSIs Recent Developments
- FSIs for inclusion in the SDDS
- Approval in March 2010 by the IMF Board to
include 7 FSIs as a new data category in SDDS on
an encouraged basis - Technical work is underway to make these FSIs
available through the SDDS - One FSI not in the list of original 40
- FSIs in the IMFs Global Financial Stability
Report (GFSR) to be integrated into the FSI
project - GFSR FSIs will become by-product of overall IMF
FSI Project - Collection and preparation of FSIs for inclusion
in GFSR starting with the April 2011 issue - Work focused on non-FSI reporters included in
GFSR - Work with current FSI reporters to obtain time
series data - One FSI not in the list of original 40
- SDDS Plus has a proposal to
- Include almost all FSIs encouraged in the SDDS as
required in the SDDS Plus - Add two real estate prices to the list of
required data in the SDDS Plus
5FSI Reference Group (FSIRG) Meeting
- FSIRG meeting is scheduled to take place during
November 15-16, 2011 at IMF Headquarters - An Issues Paper was circulated in July 2011 that
identifies issues for discussion - FSIs for deposit takers
- Impact of the BASEL III Accord on the scope and
definition of FSIs - FSIs for other financial corporations
- Scope of FSIs, sectoral breakdown of OFCs, large
non-bank financial institutions, etc. - FSIs for non-financial corporations, households,
and real estate markets - Scope or refinement of FSIs for non-financial
corporations - Scope or refinement of FSIs for households
- Expanding the reporting of real estate prices
- Improving the frequency and timeliness of FSIs
- Higher frequency, at least quarterly timeliness
to be reduced to 8-16 weeks? - Underlying profit and loss accounts and balance
sheets - Improving the cross-country comparability
- Consolidation basis and other issues for better
standardization
6FSIs Concerning Households
- I33 Household debt to GDP (encouraged)
- The data for household debt comprise debt
incurred by resident households of the economy.
This FSI measures the overall level of household
indebtedness (commonly related to consumer loans
and mortgages) as a share of GDP. - I34 Household debt service and principal payments
to income (encouraged) - This FSI is calculated by using household debt
service payments as the numerator and gross
disposable income over the same period as the
denominator. It measures the capacity of
households to cover their debt payments (interest
and principal). - http//fsi.imf.org/ has data entries (quarterly
and/or annual) from (at least) 2010 Q1 for only
22 and 8 respectively for the above indicators of
the 65 countries on the database. Many not up to
date. - I37 Residential real estate price index
(encouraged) - See next slide
7Residential Property Prices Indexes
- A difficult area
- Only a sub-set of properties are transacted each
period. Not comparing prices of like with like. - Data sources for weights and prices differ
between countries depending on legal registration
and financing arrangements. Sources include land
registry, lenders, realtors. - Progress on methods Handbook on Residential
Property Prices Indexes, version 4, May 2011 on
http//epp.eurostat.ec.europa.eu/portal/page/porta
l/hicp/methodology/owner_occupied_housing_hpi/rppi
_handbook - Essentially complete aim is to facilitate the
setting-up/improvement of residential property
prices. - Focus is on methods of quality-mix adjustment
also includes a conceptual issues, uses, methods
used, and empirical examples. - Progress on implementation Eurostat initiative
to develop harmonized RPPIs. Experimental results
available for owner-occupied housing (OOH) in the
framework of the Harmonized Indexes of Consumer
Prices (HICP) for countries in the euro area and
at the European Union level. - Progress on dissemination BIS database
http//www.bis.org/statistics/pp.htm - Currently includes data from 43 countries at
different frequencies. Data differ significantly
from country to country in terms of type of
property, area covered, vintage, priced unit, and
compilation methods. - Country RPPIs included are in some cases a
selection of those available.
8 Other Data Initiatives Related to Households
- Income, consumption, and wealth of households
- The Inter Agency Group (IAG) on Economic and
Financial Statistics (BIS, Eurostat, ECB, IMF,
OECD, UN, and World Bank) is promoting the
production and dissemination of sectoral
macroeconomic accounts, including those for the
household and nonprofit institutions sector. - Financial interconnectedness of household with
the other economic sectors (including the rest of
the world) - The IAG is promoting the development of
from-whom-to-whom breakdowns of the sectoral
macroeconomic accounts for financial positions
and flows within the context of the sectoral
accounts work. - Distributional aspects and micro-macro link
- OECD and Eurostat task forces will develop the
methodology for matching micro data with national
accounts. Once methodologies are in place,
periodic monitoring of the distribution of
household economic resources (income,
consumption, and wealth) within the System of
National Accounts could be envisaged. This might
extend to household debt, given its importance to
the identification of vulnerabilities developing
in the domestic economy.
9GFSR IMFs Global Financial Stability Report