In the aftermath of the 2008 Global Financial Crisis and the subsequent European sovereign debt crisis, central banks increased their emphasis on transparency and proactive risk monitoring. The Bank of Spain, as the national competent authority within the Single Supervisory Mechanism (SSM), developed the Central de Balances (CBI) and, subsequently, a public-facing simulator. The Simulador Banco de España allows any entity—from a small business owner to a university student—to input financial data and receive an estimate of the firm’s credit quality and vulnerability to economic shocks.
Small firms lacking access to internal risk rating systems use the simulator to: simulador banco de españa
(Le falta un punto de modernidad visual y fiscalidad, pero su fiabilidad es inigualable). In the aftermath of the 2008 Global Financial
The Simulador Banco de España (Bank of Spain Simulator) is an official digital tool designed to bridge the gap between complex regulatory frameworks and practical credit risk assessment. While often used by students and small financial entities for educational purposes, its underlying logic mirrors the methodologies employed by the European Central Bank (ECB) and the Bank of Spain for macroprudential stress testing. This paper examines the simulator’s core components—financial ratios, probability of default (PD) estimation, and macroeconomic scenario analysis—evaluating its utility as both a training mechanism for analysts and a preliminary self-assessment instrument for non-financial corporations (NFCs). We argue that the simulator democratizes access to central bank risk models but suffers from inherent limitations due to its simplified, deterministic nature. Small firms lacking access to internal risk rating
The simulator typically requires the following inputs, derived from annual accounts: