2 March 2026 - 4 March 2026

Online

Host: TBC

Recovery and Resolution Regimes

Description

This course is designed to equip experienced central bankers and financial regulators with the knowledge and tools to design and implement effective recovery and resolution frameworks. Recent banking turmoil has underscored the importance of ending “too-big-to-fail” while safeguarding financial stability and taxpayer interests. The course examines lessons from recent failures, highlighting the need for intrusive supervision, early intervention, and robust resolution planning—even for smaller institutions that could become systemic under stress. Participants will explore flexible resolution regimes, liquidity strategies, and governance reforms to empower supervisors to act decisively in times of crisis.

Objectives

By the end of this course, participants will be able to:

  • Assess the key principles of recovery and resolution planning for systemic and non-systemic banks.
  • Analyse recent case studies (e.g., Credit Suisse, U.S. regional banks) to identify supervisory gaps and lessons learned.
  • Design flexible resolution strategies that balance financial stability and taxpayer protection.
  • Evaluate liquidity needs during resolution and mechanisms for rapid support without compromising central bank balance sheets.
  • Strengthen institutional frameworks to ensure clear mandates, adequate powers, and independence for supervisors.

Target Participants

Participants should have 3-5 years of experience in the related areas.

Resource Persons

The faculty will be drawn from SEACEN-member Central Banks and SEACEN faculty.

 

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