Title: Economics 330
1Economics 330
- Bank Regulation
- Why and How?
- Deposit Insurance
- Lectures 21-22
- Ref Chapters 8, 9, 11
2- Why Regulate Banks?
- Four principal reasons
- Deposit Safety/Customer Protection to guard
against loss of peoples life-time savings
against the risk-taking behaviour of third
parties. - Stability of the Financial System to ensure
efficient flow of loanable funds from lenders to
borrowers. - Encourage competition and efficiency monopoly
set higher prices, restricts output, creates
deadweight losses. - Facilitate the conduct of monetary policy
control of the medium of exchanges and all that
go with it matter in the pace and level of
economic activities.
3- 2. Regulation of the financial system in general
is based on the premise that - (a) The unregulated financial market is
inherently unstable. It can generate undesirable
shocks for the economy. (See Chp 8. pp. 177-183
for the factors that can trigger financial
crises.) - Increase in interest rates (problem of
sub-prime), - Increase in market uncertainty,
- Problems in Banking such as bank panic,
- Stock market crashes, or asset market effect on
banks balance sheet, - Government fiscal imbalances.
4- (b) The undesirable financial shocks may lead to
socially undesirable or less optimal economic
outcomes Potential loss of wealth of many people
-
- (c) Financial instability imposes both private
and social costs. - (d) That the Social cost may be greater than
Private Cost
5- 3. Asymmetric Information in the Financial
System. - (i) Asymmetric information Adverse Selection
(before transaction) and Moral Hazard (after
transaction) problems -
- Asymmetric information affects the financial
system through the - Behaviour of depositors. How?
- Behaviour of borrowers. How?
- Behaviour of financial intermediaries. How?
-
- Consequences Imperfect information and
uncertainty in financial markets can all lead to - Unwillingness of surplus spending units to put
money in a bank - Unwillingness of lenders to lend.
- Excessive risk-taking by financial
intermediaries. - Excessively high average cost of borrowing.
6- 4. Example
- Imperfect Information and Financial
Intermediation in less developed economies. - In many less developed financial economies, part
of the reasons people find it difficult to invest
is not for the lack of investment opportunities. - Limited supply of deposits means limited supply
of loanable funds and high cost of borrowing. - Low bank credit means (credit rationing, p. 208)
less investment, less investment means less
capital to support private sector growth. - Slow or no growth means low per capita incomes
and low standard of living. - Imperfect or Asymmetric information impedes the
flow of funds in the economy with overall adverse
effect on the level of economic activities.
Solution?
7- 5. Banking Regulation is a public good
- What is a public good?
- Safety of the financial system depends on the
public perception of the safety of deposits. - Safety of deposits in turn depends on the public
perception of the honesty and soundness of all
deposits and therefore of all banks. - There is an interdependence of banking
relationships. - Bank failures are contagious (Domino effects)
- Bank Runs Failure of one bank can erode
publics confidence and cause panic runs. (p. 253)
8- (a) Public versus Private Regulation of banks
- The alternative to government regulation is the
myriad of private surveillance and private
contracts by economic agents. (See Chp. 9 pp. 205
209 of banks instruments to manage credit or
default risk). - These measures, however, entail High Information
And Monitoring Costs on the part of the bank. - (b) Public regulation
- Is a better substitute for the myriad of private
contracts. - Is cost saving and efficient with common
standards. - It establishes confidence in every single bank
because of the common rules and assurances of
safety. - It establishes confidence in the entire banking
system
9- 6. Other Reasons for Public regulation of Banks
- (a) Encourage Competition and Efficiency
- Financial intermediaries exist to provide
intermediation services efficiently. - Efficiency means the ability to provide
services at least cost with greatest convenience. - Regulated competition in financial markets is a
tool to encourage efficiency. - Competition forces firms to be innovative in
responding to both technological and market
demand changes. - Regulation ensures that few large institutions
do not capture certain aspects of the financial
market. Regulated entry is important to curtail
monopoly tendencies.
10- (b) Government Regulation Control the Quantity
of the Money Stock - Key M1 Cp Demand Deposits (Type A Type B)
- (Ref. Chp 9 how banks create different deposits.
- Should there be an optimum amount of the money
stock in the economy? - Do you agree that there should there be limits on
loan expansion in a market economy? - Who should determine the price of loans?
- What prevents individual banks from expanding
their loan portfolio as earning assets to any
limits they see fit? - The ability to control the money stock in the
economy depends in part on the ability of
deposit-taking institutions to create bank money
through the expansion of credit.
11- HOW DO WE REGULATE BANKS?
- Market Approach (Self-regulation versus
Government regulation) - What is self-regulation?
- Advantages and Disadvantages of self-regulation
(ENRON)
12Basic Categories of Bank Regulation (Chp. 11, pp.
266-274)
- Government Safety Net Use of Deposit Insurance
Explicit or Implicit - Restrictions on Asset holdings and Capital
requirements portfolio restrictions - Bank Licensing and Examinations prudential
supervision - Assessment of Risk Management
- Disclosure requirements Free-rider problem,
Information production for the benefit of all
depositors. - Consumer protection
- Restrictions on open competition.
13Principal-Agent Problem the Distribution gains
from banking and the cost of bank failures
Taxpayers
Depositors
Borrowers
14Asymmetric Information in Financial Markets, and
Banking Regulation (See Chp 8, 11)
- Adverse Selection
- What is adverse selection problem in financial
markets? - Describe the nature of the adverse selection and
the consequences in each of the following
relationships - Depositors and bankers
- Bankers and borrowers
- Government regulators and bankers
- Moral Hazard
- What is moral hazard problem in financial
markets? - Describe the nature of the moral hazard problem
and the consequences in each of the following
relationships - Depositors and bankers
- Bankers and borrowers
- Government regulators and bankers
15DEPOSIT INSURANCE
- Canadian Deposit Insurance Corporation
- Established in 1967 Crown Corporation
- Objectives
- Provide insurance on deposits to protect
depositors from bank insolvency - To enhance public confidence in the soundness of
these institutions. - Ensure financial stability
16What CDIC Covers
- What is covered and what is not covered (See p.
281) - only C deposits in Canada up to C100,000.
- - US accounts not covered.
- - Covers savings and chequing accounts, term
deposits (lt 5years) - All federally chartered institutions
- Provincially chartered TML companies
- Not Covered
- Credit Unions (covered under provincial insurance
arrangements) - Caisses populaires (covered under Quebec
arrangements) - Investment bankers
17How CDIC Performs its Functions
- How its performs its Functions
- Provides cash settlement or equivalent deposits
of C100,000 (foreign currency deposits not
covered) - Requires all insured institutions to follow
standards of sound business and financial
practices - Extends loans to or acquire assets of distress
institutions - Provides assistance for the re-organization/takeov
er of distressed institutions
18Financing Deposit Insurancea) Flat Premium
option- Case For case Against?b)
Differential-risk-based premium case for case
againstc) Use of Coinsurance a fraction say
x of deposits will be insured and the balance
will not be insured.
- Premium Category
Premium rate -
( of Insured Deposits) - 1 1/24 of 1 (0.417) 0.0417 cents per
100 - 2 1/12 of 1 (0.0833) 0.083 cents per
100 - 3 1/6 of 1 (0.1667) 0.16.67 cents per
100 - 4 1/3 of 1 (0.333) 0.333 cents per
100 - Opting Out clause (banks that accept primarily
wholesale deposits)
19Questions
- Who benefits from deposit insurance? Explain.
- Who should pay for deposit insurance premiums?
The banks, the depositors, the lenders, the
general public, or the government? Justify your
response. - Some recent proposals for reforming banking
regulatory system include the elimination of
deposit insurance. Would you support this
proposal - (a) if you are a banker? Why?
- (b) if you are a depositor? why?
- c) Finally would you support this proposal if
your job is to protect the public interest?