Former banker Sir Ralph Norris has weighed into the debate over the Reserve Bank's proposals to boost bank capital.
Norris, a Kiwi who headed up ASB bank for 10 years until 2001 and later went on to become chief executive of ASB parent Commonwealth Bank of Australia, told The Australian that introducing the proposals alongside a deposit guarantee scheme was a step too far.
"They [the Reserve Bank of New Zealand] have probably gone a step too far … with the deposit guarantee it is almost a doubling up."
The RBNZ's proposals which include a near doubling of the minimum common equity banks should hold from 8.5 per cent currently to 16 per cent, have met with strong resistance from the Australian-owned banks.
The proposed increase is designed to make banks safer and better designed to handle periods of financial stress by holding enough capital to reduce the probability of a financial crisis in New Zealand to a one in 200-year event.