Wednesday, April 22, 2009

IMF's bank-rescue plan looks pretty similar to what we are doing/are trying to do/are told that we are doing

From the Atlantic Business Channel:

"Apr 22 2009, 10:48 am

So Does the IMF Agree With the Geithner Plan, After All?

I'm starting to look through the depressingly informative IMF report, paying particular attention to its broader theory of how to properly recapitalize the banks, and I'm seeing a lot of familiar advice. Considering Simon Johnson's articulate and highly circulated critique of the United States' incestuous relationship with the banking elite, I guess I'm a little relieved that the IMF's bank-rescue plan looks pretty similar to what we are doing/are trying to do/are told that we are doing.

Conditions for public infusion of capital should be strict. Viable banks that have insufficient capital should receive capital injections from the government that preferably encourages private capital to bring capital ratios to a level sufficient to regain market confidence ... Compensation packages and the possible replacement of top management should be examined carefully ... Nonviable financial institutions need to be resolved as promptly as possible. Such resolution may entail a merger or possibly an orderly closure as long as it does not endanger system-wide financial stability.
Restructuring may require temporary government ownership. The current inability to attract private money suggests that the crisis has deepened to the point where governments need to take bolder steps and not shrink from capital injections in the form of common shares, even if it means taking majority, or even complete, control of institutions. Temporary government ownership may thus be necessary, but only with the intention of restructuring the institution to return it to the private sector as rapidly as possible.
The Obama administration is notoriously reluctant to resort to absolute government ownership, and for good reason. The IMF report is not going to comment on the political implications of a left-of-center party nationalizing banks in a preternaturally pro-business country. But that last bit sounds pretty familiar, yeah? One more piece of advice:

Cross-border cooperation and consistency is important. Cross-border coordination of the principles underlying public sector decisions to provide capital injections and the conditions for such injections is crucial in order to avoid regulatory arbitrage or competitive distortions.
I think the G20 meeting and Obama's effort to tether other countries to our bailout efforts fits into that category.

So look, this isn't quite an in-your-face-Simon-Johnson! moment. Johnson spent a lot of time talking about how we have to reassess our relationship with Wall Street elites if strategies like the ones listed above even have a chance of succeeding. And maybe we should be a little more bullish on nationalization than even the current political parameters allow. But despite the depressing math of the IMF report, the prescriptive measures give me with a little more confidence that we're on the right track."

Me:

Don the libertarian Democrat

There are two interconnected problems:
1) How to get out of the current mess
2) How to change our financial system

On 1):

"Restructuring may require temporary government ownership. The current inability to attract private money suggests that the crisis has deepened to the point where governments need to take bolder steps and not shrink from capital injections in the form of common shares, even if it means taking majority, or even complete, control of institutions. Temporary government ownership may thus be necessary, but only with the intention of restructuring the institution to return it to the private sector as rapidly as possible."

I think that Johnson agrees with this. The disagreement is over the manner and scope.

"Most capital injections from governments thus far have come as preferred shares and these have carried with them a high cost that may impair the banks’ ability to attract other forms of private capital. Consideration could be given to converting these shares into common stock so as to reduce this burden."

Here, I think that they're saying that Preferred Shares have payouts, and so converting to Common Stock would allow this payout money to be better used by trying to attract private investors. This is the current idea. I accept this plan as well, but only for pragmatic reasons. I would prefer seizing the banks in a few cases, but that is not possible now.

"Nonviable institutions should be intervened promptly,
leading to orderly resolution through closure or merger"

I think that this is what Johnson is talking about. I certainly agree with the point, but, again, right now, we're stuck with CAP and PPIP.

On 2, the report put forward a proposal I agree with, following Buiter:

"In some cases, the measures could be viewed as a starting point for the consideration of an( NB DON ) additional capital surcharge that could be designed as a deterrent to firms becoming “too-connected-to-fail.” Even if not formally used, the proposed measures could guide policymakers to limit the size of various risk exposures across institutions. Clearly, such methods would require very careful consideration and application in order to avoid outcomes whereby institutions find other means of taking profitable exposures. More discussion and research is needed before regulations based on this work could be put into place."

But here, I disagree:

"Regulation should attempt to reinforce financial institutions’ sound risk-based decision-making, whereas deterring risk-taking in the global economy would be unhelpful."

I believe that we should have a two-tiered financial system, involving Narrow Banking and a Risk Taking Financial Sector. This idea doesn't appeal to them.

On the idea of banks having too much power, I think that is the point of putting in place all of the plans and regulations that they propose. They simply didn't put their recommendations in those terms, unless I missed it.

Overall, it was a very interesting document, and I'm glad that you mentioned it.

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