170 likes | 258 Views
Appropriate structures for handling crisis management. Willem H. Buiter Professor of European Political Economy, European Institute, London school of Economics and Political Science.
E N D
Appropriate structures for handling crisis management Willem H. Buiter Professor of European Political Economy, European Institute, London school of Economics and Political Science Presentation prepared for the FMG/CCLS London Financial Regulation Seminar The Regulatory Response to the Financial Crisis, 30 January 2008, 2-6 pm, Derek Willoughby Lecture Theatre, Charterhouse Square EC1
Financial stability: the dogs that should not bark • Monetary policy (setting short risk-free nominal interest rate (operationally the target for the overnight interbank rate) • dedicated to achieving inflation target (& subject to that growth, employment etc.) • No material role in financial stability or liquidity management • Fiscal policy (public spending & taxes) • no material role in financial stability management other than through insolvency management for banks (& ofis?)
Financial stability: functions • Liquidity management • Funding liquidity (property of agents/institutions) • Discount window (when there are no solvency concerns; on demand) • Eligible liquid & illiquid collateral, valuation, haircuts • Maturity • Eligible counterparties • Penalty rate • LoLR (when there are solvency concerns as well as illiquidity; discretionary & ad-hoc) • Eligible illiquid collateral, valuation, haircuts • Maturity • Penalty rate • Other penalties
Financial stability: functions • Market Liquidity (property of instruments/markets) • Regular open market operations (outright purchases or repos) involving liquid securities • Eligible liquid securities/collateral; haircuts • Maturity • Eligible counterparties • MMLR operations (outright purchases or repos) involving illiquid assets • Eligible illiquid securities/collateral; valuation, haircuts • Maturity • Eligible counterparties • Penalty rate (?)
Financial stability: functions • Insolvency management • Special insolvency regime for failing banks (& ofis?) • ‘Prompt corrective action’ • Quantitative/objective or qualitative/subjective triggers • ‘Bridge bank’; takes over & runs failing institution; ringfences deposits & can transfer them to third party • Deposit insurance • Industry-funded or taxpayer-funded • Pre-funded or funded ex-post
Financial stability: functions • “Covert operations” • Secrecy for assistance by Authorities during short-term windows of vulnerability (e.g. time it took for SocSec to arrange a capital subscription) • Find ‘private sector solution’ for troubled/failing bank (problem with Takeover Code). • Provide secret LoLR assistance (alleged problem with EU Market Abuse Directive & its transposition into UK law/rules is spurious).
Financial stability: institutions • Central bank (Bank of England) • Regulator/Supervisor (FSA) • Ministry of Finance (Treasury) • Deposit insurance agency (Financial Services Compensation Scheme) • Bank insolvency management agency (NADA)
Existing arrangements • Inadequate deposit insurance (co-insurance, delays, limit) • No special bank insolvency resolution regime • Tripartite arrangement
The current Tripartite arrangement • Why did it fail? • Failure to announce deposit guarantee when Liquidity Support Facility for NR was announced. • Failure to speak with one voice • Information required for provision of funding liquidity to individual banks (FSA) institutionally separate from short-term deep pockets (BoE) & long-term non-inflationary deep pockets (Treasury) • Long list of idiosyncratic failures (Northern Rock reckless, FSA asleep, BoE late to own up to responsibility for market liquidity, Treasury dithering)
Can opener • Assume we have an efficient deposit insurance scheme and insolvency resolution scheme for banks (& possibly systemically important ofis). • Deposit insurance and insolvency resolution scheme for banks best put with the same agency • That agency should probably be the FSA, financially backed by the Treasury, but could be a separate agency • DI cannot be funded (ex-ante or ex-post) by participating institutions when there is a systemic run on the banking sector • Note, with adequate DI & IRS, no need for Covert Operations B and C (see slide 6.)
Why the Treasury Committee’s proposal won’t work • Authority relationship between Deputy Governor of BoE/Head of Fin Stab and Governor of BoE unclear • LoLR role too political to be compatible with MPC operational independence for monetary policy • Partial solution: take Deputy Governor of BoE/Head of Fin Stab off MPC (suggested in Treasury Cttee Report). • Radical solution: take MPC out of BoE • Make Governor of BoE head of Fin Stab • Governor of BoE no longer Chair of MPC? • Governor of BoE no longer member of MPC? • BoE Agent of MPC for targeting overnight interbank rate (would require change in money market operating procedures – ‘pegging’ the repo & reverse repo rates instead of the current attempts to fix both P & Q)
Minimalist Monetary Authority Proposal • Give Monetary Authority responsibility for • Deciding and setting Bank Rate • Managing market liquidity • Regular OMOs • Market Maker of Last Resort • Managing funding liquidity only through the discount window (standing lending facility) • Make Regulator LoLR, through an open-ended, uncapped credit line with the BoE, guaranteed by the Treasury
The Tripartite Arrangement with a minimalist central bank 15
How to handle troubled bankswhen there is effective depositinsurance & Is bank illiquid? Yes No Be happy! Is bank insolvent? Yes Is bank systemically important? No Don't know Yes No Bank fails Special LoLR credit line with FSA (& MMLR) Go to FSA special insolvency regime (nationalisation) OMOs & MMLR & Discount Window with BoE 16