In their recently published book, 'The Banker's New Clothes', Anat Admati and Martin Hellwig suggest
that the causes of the global financial crisis were similar in some respects to
the causes of the nuclear power disaster in Japan in 2011. In the case of the
nuclear power disaster, the authors suggest that corrupted politicians and
regulators had colluded with the Tokyo Electric Power Company to ignore known
safety concerns. They comment:
'When an earthquake and tsunami occurred in 2011, this led
to a nuclear disaster that was entirely preventable.
Weak regulation and ineffective enforcement were similarly
instrumental in the buildup of risks in the financial system that turned the
U.S. housing decline into a financial tsunami'.
It might seem obvious to just about everyone that government
regulation of the nuclear power industry is desirable to prevent outcomes such
as those experienced in Japan (even though regulation was spectacularly unsuccessful
in this instance) but I feel inclined to step back a little to consider why
such regulation is desirable. What is the problem that the regulation is
intended to remedy in the nuclear power industry?
The obvious answer is that in conducting
their business of providing electric power to their customers, there is a risk
that nuclear power firms may accidentally cause harm to other people. But that
is also true of many other business activities. Firms have an incentive to take
precautions to avoid such incidental harm because they know that potential
victims can sue for compensation.
So, why is additional government regulation needed in the
nuclear power industry? Leaving aside the possibility of nuclear material
getting in to the wrong hands, a need for additional regulation may arise
because of the potential magnitude of the harm that might occur as a result of
a nuclear accident. The harmful consequences of a nuclear catastrophe might be
so great that the responsible firm would be unable to pay full compensation.
That would pose a problem for government of whether to step in and help the
victims, but it also poses the problem of how to ensure that the managers of the
firm have a greater incentive to take precautions to avoid a catastrophe that would
bankrupt the firm twice over, than to avoid a catastrophe that would bankrupt
the firm only once. So, there might be a case for the government to step in to attempt
to ensure that adequate precautions are taken.
Is there a similar case for regulation of major financial
institutions? When I looked at this question a few weeks ago I suggested that
when the failure of one bank leads to loss of confidence in other banks that have
taken similar risks might just reflect a process in which the market is taking
appropriate account of new information. For example, if a financial institution
becomes insolvent because a decline in property values causes a decline in the
asset backed securities in its balance sheet, that information could be
expected to bring about a re-assessment of the value of assets of other
financial institutions. It should not be surprising that those financial
institutions that are considered to be at greater risk of becoming insolvent would
suffer from a loss of confidence and have greater difficulty in conducting
their business. That is the way an efficient market could be expected to weed
out firms that can no longer be trusted to pay their bills. There does not seem
to be anything in that scenario that is analogous to the harmful pollution
released as a result of a nuclear accident.
Why do the authors argue that major financial institutions
ought not be allowed to fail? The main reason they give is contagion, which adversely
affects the broader economy. When a major financial institution collapses it is
unable to meet its obligations to other institutions, which are also weakened.
As more financial institutions anticipate liquidity problems and attempt to
sell assets, there is likely to be a further decline in asset values. As financial
institutions cut back lending, the broader economy is adversely affected.
Those effects on the broader economy would be dampened, in
my view, if central banks were doing a good job of maintaining public expectations
of steady growth of aggregate demand. Central banks were slow to use tools such
as quantitative easing to do this during the global financial crisis. Even if
central banks had made a more determined effort to manage expectations, however,
it is doubtful whether they would have been entirely successful in countering
fears that failure of several major financial institutions was likely to have
severe adverse impacts on aggregate output and employment.
The authors make the point that it would be extremely
difficult to allow large complex financial institutions to fail without major
disruption when they became insolvent. Proposals that they could be taken over
by public authorities until they were placed under new ownership would be
difficult to implement because these firms have thousands of subsidiaries and other
related entities spread over different countries. Separate resolution
procedures would be required for different subsidiaries in different countries.
Massive problems of coordination would be involved.
Governments seem to have managed somehow to get us into a vicious
cycle where fears of contagion have led them to encourage major financial
institutions in the believe that they were too big to fail, while the belief
that governments would bail them out has led major financial institutions to
take excessive risks. If we can't let big financial institutions fail when they
become insolvent, perhaps the next best option is to find the least cost way of
regulating them to make it less likely that they will become insolvent. That
does present governments with problems that are similar to those involved in
regulating the nuclear power industry.
In a later post I will discuss Anat Admati and Martin
Hellwig's views of how governments can reduce the risk of insolvency in
financial institutions that are too big to be allowed to fail.
Postscript
I am writing this postscript before I have posted the article
because I have had some further thoughts about market failure, a concept that I was tempted to mention above. An earlier post about financial crises led to a discussion with Jim Belshaw about the meaning
of market failure. During the course of that discussion I conceded that the
concept of market failure is of limited use and made the point (attributed to
Harold Demsetz) that the relevant choice is not between an existing imperfect
market and an ideal norm of a perfect market, but between real world outcomes under
current institutional arrangements and a proposed alternative set of
institutional arrangements. My new point (new to me anyhow) is that if some
feasible outcome is superior to that which exists at present, then past failure
to implement the changes necessary to achieve that outcome should be viewed as
government failure rather than market failure.
2 comments:
Winton, re the Japanese experience, I wouldn't suggest it was the whole cause but a factor which often leads to failure is the 'screwing down' of contract prices such that in order to make a profit, corners are cut.
Can't see how it might apply to the financial system, but you see it all the time in contract work, big and small. (Think computer systems, defence acquisitions, home builders, etc.
kvd
kvd: You may be right. When they perceive that their survival is threatened, firms are more likely to take risks. That would often involve cutting corners in terms of quality or safety.
In the case of banks, cutting corners could involve reducing costs in loan assessment and taking on more poor quality loans.
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