The Economist
on Narrow Banks
The Economists Free Exchange blog covers narrow banks, and parts
of my "run free" paper in a post
somewhat mean-spiritedly -- or perhaps unintentionally self-descriptively --
titled "Narrow Minded." I always appreciate publicity, but a
few parts seem wrong enough to address.
After nicely covering the history of the idea, the Economist writes,
After nicely covering the history of the idea, the Economist writes,
such a plan raises huge practical questions.
The first is implementation: how to get from today’s system of highly indebted
banks to one in which they are financed chiefly by equity.
That's not hard. We're slowly raising capital
requirements, and all we have to do is to keep raising them. My Pigouvian tax
on debt would help a lot -- I think banks screaming how hard it is to issue
equity or how terrible not to pay dividends for a while would suddenly find it
much easier if paying 5 cents for each dollar of debt issued. Announcing that
institutions above 50% equity and with less than 20% short-term debt are exempt
from Basel and Dodd-Frank asset regulation might cause a rush for the exits.
Politically, there would be formidable
opposition from vested interests.
And this is, somehow, an argument against the
plan rather than for it? There is formidable opposition from vested interests
against abolishing agricultural subsidies, trade protection, occupational
licensing, and taxicab monopolies. Dear Economist, when did feeding the cronies
become an argument for keeping bad policy in place, not a main indicator of
needed change?
Economically, the transition would require banks to dispose of a vast stock of loans, or raise an equivalent amount of long-term debt and equity.
The first is simply untrue, and the second is
deeply misleading. For every dollar of long term debt or equity that must be raised,
one dollar of short term debt is paid back. No extra funds from investors are
required, and no selling of assets is required. It's just a Modigliani-Miller /
Yogi Berra reslicing of the same pizza.
A second concern is whether a split between
narrow banks and wider lending-and-investment firms would actually eliminate
runs. If other institutions replace banks in making loans, they could end up
creating fragilities of their own. Mutual funds, for example, are financed by
shareholders, not creditors; but if such shares are seen as stable and safe,
investors will treat them as deposits—and try to withdraw their investment if
that safety is threatened.
This is just simply wrong, and in the
"Economist should know better" camp. You cannot "withdraw your
investment" from a floating-value fund. The fund makes no
fixed-value promises. It cannot fail. It cannot suffer a run. Look up the
definition of run, dear Economist! A floating-value fund, and especially an
exchange-traded fund with no one-day NAV promise, is the paradigmatic
example of a run-proof institution.
Yes, investors can all try to dump stocks, either held directly or held through funds, and stock prices can go down. There is no failure, no bankruptcy, and no crisis in this. We want a system that allows booms and busts without crises, not the promise that wise regulators will step in to stabilize stock prices!
Yes, investors can all try to dump stocks, either held directly or held through funds, and stock prices can go down. There is no failure, no bankruptcy, and no crisis in this. We want a system that allows booms and busts without crises, not the promise that wise regulators will step in to stabilize stock prices!
After this happened even once, people would
simply flock to the narrow banks, and there would be no source of lending.” To
prevent this, the authors argue, governments would have to intervene to save
the “not-so-narrow intermediaries”.
Now we're deep into the silly season. The
intermediaries do not need any saving. They have not made any promises. A
floating value fund cannot go bankrupt! Yes, stock prices can fall, and your
fire sale is my buying opportunity. Do we really want Governments and their
central banks buying stocks to prop up their values? Do we really want
governments allocating credit? Have we so lost sight of what a
"crisis" is, and is not?
Third, such a system would still need plenty
of regulation.
The fact that we need some regulation -- that
I don't produce a libertarian-anarchist nirvana solution in which absolutely
zero regulation is required -- is somehow a defense of the current monstrous
setup? I think we need cops at stoplights. Is this a defense of Dodd-Frank?
Come now, it takes about 1/10th the regulation, because we can throw out all
regulation of the safety of bank asssets, all the risk weights, all the stress
tests, all the "resolution," and so on. The perfect is truly the
enemy of the good at the Economist.
But given the growing cost and inefficiency
of today’s regulatory regime, the concept of narrow banking surely deserves
more serious consideration.
I'll take the grudging endorsement and return a grudging gratitude for
the mention of the idea!
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