Global Rankings: Bank Capital To Assets % (2023)

Rank Country Value
1 Dominican Republic 47.92
2 Maldives 19.08
3 Argentina 18.31
4 Tonga 15.55
5 Uganda 15.49
6 Cambodia 15.21
7 Georgia 15.19
8 Solomon Islands 13.93
9 Saudi Arabia 13.73
10 Iceland 13.69
11 Indonesia 13.36
12 Moldova, Republic of 13.11
13 Uzbekistan 13.02
14 Eswatini 12.89
15 Kazakhstan 12.78
16 Belarus 12.75
17 Kyrgyzstan 12.50
18 Papua New Guinea 12.34
19 Kuwait 12.08
20 Panama 12.06
21 Trinidad and Tobago 11.92
22 Iraq 11.85
23 Peru 11.74
24 North Macedonia 11.57
25 United Arab Emirates 11.47
26 Central African Republic 11.12
27 Ecuador 10.84
28 Namibia 10.76
29 Samoa 10.69
30 Colombia 10.66
31 Thailand 10.60
32 Kenya 10.43
33 Mexico 10.24
34 Uruguay 10.12
35 Antigua and Barbuda 10.12
36 Bosnia and Herzegovina 10.10
37 Jordan 10.08
38 Bulgaria 10.05
39 Ireland 10.03
40 Costa Rica 9.88
41 Saint Kitts and Nevis 9.81
42 Mauritius 9.75
43 Slovenia 9.60
44 Lesotho 9.54
45 Latvia 9.52
46 Philippines 9.42
47 Estonia 9.34
48 Croatia 9.33
49 Brazil 8.87
50 Congo 8.86
51 Albania 8.69
52 Botswana 8.69
53 United States 8.68
54 Paraguay 8.60
55 Hungary 8.60
56 Gabon 8.59
57 Montenegro 8.56
58 Luxembourg 8.51
59 El Salvador 8.47
60 Malawi 8.23
61 Austria 8.20
62 Azerbaijan 8.18
63 Saint Lucia 8.06
64 Nicaragua 7.95
65 Malta 7.93
66 Hong Kong 7.81
67 Greece 7.79
68 Switzerland 7.78
69 Chile 7.75
70 Cyprus 7.68
71 Malaysia 7.64
72 Slovakia 7.59
73 Norway 7.52
74 Germany 7.29
75 Guatemala 7.24
76 Türkiye 7.20
77 Madagascar 7.06
78 Israel 7.03
79 Saint Vincent and the Grenadines 6.87
80 Nepal 6.78
81 Cameroon 6.65
82 Bangladesh 6.55
83 Czechia 6.33
84 Poland 6.32
85 Netherlands 6.13
86 United Kingdom 6.08
87 India 6.08
88 San Marino 5.94
89 Sweden 5.92
90 Congo, The Democratic Republic of the 5.89
91 Finland 5.80
92 Belgium 5.72
93 Spain 5.66
94 France 5.47
95 Ghana 5.23
96 Ukraine 4.98
97 Denmark 4.90
98 Pakistan 4.79
99 Canada 4.75
100 Macao 3.84
101 Chad -1.04
102 Equatorial Guinea -6.40

About This Indicator

The indicator is a measure of capital adequacy that evaluates the financial strength of deposit takers by comparing Tier 1 capital to total assets. Tier 1 capital, often referred to as core capital, includes the most stable and readily available forms of capital, such as common equity, disclosed reserves, retained earnings, and certain other instruments that meet regulatory requirements under the Basel framework. This capital is considered the highest quality because it is fully available to cover losses and does not need to be repaid.

Data source: World Bank Development Indicators