Ireland: Financial System Stability Assessment
July 7, 2022
Summary
This Financial System Stability Assessment paper highlights that the Irish financial system has grown rapidly and in complexity, especially after Brexit, and Ireland has become a European base for large financial groups. Risks to financial stability emanate from a much larger and more complex financial system, persistent legacy issues, as well as emergent ones from non-bank lending, Fintech, and climate change. Stress tests confirmed banks’ resilience to severe macrofinancial shocks, with some caveats. While broadly adequate, supervisory resources and capacity need to keep pace with a growing and more complex sector with significant cross-border linkages. Efforts are needed to further strengthen supervision of banks’ credit risk and develop capacity and skills on new areas such as climate, non-bank lending, and Fintech. Insurance oversight should prioritize intra-group complexities. Resolution and crisis management can be enhanced through greater planning and collaboration between the Central Bank and the Department of Finance to bolster the ability to deal effectively with institution failures and systemic crises.
Subject: Financial institutions, Financial regulation and supervision, Financial sector policy and analysis, International organization, Monetary policy
Keywords: banking sector Stress Testing Matrix, C. banking sector solvency, Commercial banks, Europe, Financial Sector Assessment Program, Foreign banks, G. insurance sector solvency, Global, Insurance companies, insurance sector liquidity risk analysis, MBF sector
Pages:
66
Volume:
2022
DOI:
Issue:
215
Series:
Country Report No. 2022/215
Stock No:
1IRLEA2022003
ISBN:
9798400213564
ISSN:
1934-7685





