I agree with AlbacoreA, the underlying cause has been much pontificated about, but especially governments and central banks are totally blind to the fact that it was their own policies that lead to the continuous boom/bust cycle. Instead it is merely pointed out that "banks made too many risky loans". This ignores two fundamental things: (a) central banks control the amount of money supply and (b) central banks have direct control over interest rates. It was central banks that provided the huge amounts of money at low rates that allowed commercial banks to make many high risk loans at low rates. And guess who controlls central banks?To be honest the time has come and gone on who to blame, assigning blame will have no impact on economic recovery. Its happened, joe public made some bad decissions, joe bank made some bad decisions, and joe government made some bad decisions.
I agree with you and have said the same numerous times. The mistakes of some should never become the burden of everyone. All this does is reduce the risk on individuals, leading them to take on excessive risk.What bugs me is that I didn't buy a house, or get caught up the mess yet Im having to pay for other peoples mistakes. My children will have to pay for their mistakes too during their lifetime.
I agree.... the causes of the problems must be identified in order that they can be prevented from happening again.
For example, we're told that the banks had to be saved as they were of systemic importance... have any steps been taken so that individual banks can be allowed to fail in the future?, I don't think so..
Clearly we need a system where insolvent banks can be allowed to go under... possibly regular savers could be protected, but not investors. Has any work been done on this?, What could be done?... possibly banks could be limited in how much exposure they have to various types of things...
I know this is your hobby horse Chris but I fundamentally disagree with you. One of the huge benefits that our financial system confers on society is facilitating a massive maturity mismatch. For example, pensioners with savings accumulated over many years have large sums on deposits. These are lent out to young people on 20 year mortgages. Imagine a world where 20 year mortgages had to be backed by 20 year deposits - that seems to be what you mean by being solvent.The problem with the whole mess is that our financial system is based on fractional reserve banking, which basically means that banks are in a permanent state of insolvency protected by government guarantees and central banks. Fractional reserve banking cannot function without the implicit and explicit guarantees of bailouts by governements and central banks.
Hey Duke, yes indeed the finacial system is a bit of a hobby horse of mine and we've had some great discussions about this. I wasn't really referring to the maturity mismatch. I agree that this does give rise to certain opportunities, while it does have some very big risks.I know this is your hobby horse Chris but I fundamentally disagree with you. One of the huge benefits that our financial system confers on society is facilitating a massive maturity mismatch. For example, pensioners with savings accumulated over many years have large sums on deposits. These are lent out to young people on 20 year mortgages. Imagine a world where 20 year mortgages had to be backed by 20 year deposits - that seems to be what you mean by being solvent.
It normally works very well because depositors in aggregate are sticky even though individual deposits are entirely liquid. It obviously requires the pensioners to have supreme confidence in their banks. Central Banks guarantee the liquidity of the banks. But we used maintain a pretence that they didn't guarantee the solvency of the banks. Pensioners by and large are not interested in fine distinctions between liquidity and solvency - they want their deposits to be absolutely safe, they never saw themselves as risk takers. There is no doubt in my mind that if and when the Bank Guarantee is stopped nobody will have any deposit greater than what is covered by the Deposit Guarantee scheme. The societal self delusion that depositors are risk takers has been blown for a very long time to come.
I fully agree that punishment is the only way to learn from mistakes. And the best punishment is financial loss through the profit and loss system. Having governemnt come up with some form of penalty on institutions that had to be bailed out is not a good idea. Let's face it, politicians are so entwined with the financial industry that they will never punish mistakes as severely as the free market would.Maybe I've a very simplistic view. To me, the mechanism worked fine when it was controlled. The problem was banks exceeded their own rules and the regulator and thus the govt let them. People accepted something that was too good to be true, mainly due to peer pressure. You're meant to learn form mistakes, not repeat them. Blaming everything on someone, or somewhere else seems like a denial of responsibility to me. Without enforcement and punishment, no lessons will be learned.
Not everyone fell into this, either by design or luck.
I put in the bit in [ ]. What you are effectively saying is that the other assets of the bank e.g. credit to industry, mortgages etc. should not be funded by deposits but must either be backed by shareholder capital or by liabilites which match those assets. The inexorable logic of your insistence that a bank must at all times be in a position to meet a 100% run on its depoits is that society would be denied two of the great benefits of our modern financial system (1) maturity transformation and (2) risk transformation.I was more referring to the fact that if there was a run on a bank for all deposits, then that bank is effectively bankrupt, at all times, as it does not hold all deposits, rather only a fraction [in instantly available hard cash].
I put in the bit in [ ]. What you are effectively saying is that the other assets of the bank e.g. credit to industry, mortgages etc. should not be funded by deposits but must either be backed by shareholder capital or by liabilites which match those assets. The inexorable logic of your insistence that a bank must at all times be in a position to meet a 100% run on its depoits is that society would be denied two of the great benefits of our modern financial system (1) maturity transformation and (2) risk transformation.
These are wonderful things but, to fall back on the metaphor, so to is fine wine and fine food and the other pleasures available to us. But our mothers have always told us you can get too much of a good thing. As the Mercatus link argues, we got too much of a good thing, we gorged ourselves on maturity and risk transformation and we finished in a very sorry state. But the response should not be to banish these good things from our lives for ever, but to learn how to control our appetites for them.
That's like asking do we know of any animals who did not finish up extinct except the ones currently on the planetIt seems that every fiat currency ever used has had its value eroded eventually, until it's worthless... are there any counter examples? (besides current fiat currencies, which haven't reached the end of the life cycle yet,?, i.e being eroded to no value)
Okay Chris so you would require that the CB should insist on anything available on demand or effectively available on demand should be 100% backed by reserve assets (i.e. cash with the CB). That is actually not a very onerous requirement and would not prevent credit creation backed by short term (but not demand) deposits. The problem is assessing what is the relevant Money Supply aggregate in the context of inflation policy. In these days when money transmission is so easy, the narrow aggregates are increasingly less relevant. At what duration does a time deposit cease to have an influence on the supply and demand for money i.e. on inflation?
Yes indeed, this is exactly why I am so opposed to inflationary systems and policies. The one thing the western world needs right now is less credit based spending and more production, but the fiscal system is fundamentally based on monetary expansion without the corresponding increase in productivity, i.e. credit expansion.So that seems to mean that prudent long term savers are being gently defrauded, by the government, because the government are following inflationary policies, which will result in the true value of savings being eroded.
This is a good suggestion and it would also go a long way to putting some risk aversion into banks. But as you can see now, during the boom the deposit gurantee only covered €20k, as soon as trouble hit this was increased to infinity. It is not just a limited guarantee that allows for increased risk taking, but more inportantly the precendence set by "too big to fail". The only way I could see a "no guarantee" policy working is if it were made constitutionally illegal for the government or central bank to bail out banks, or more correctly banks' creditors.It's interesting.
Why doesn't the government only guarantee savings in government banks (i.e post office) or schemes, and let the private banks do whatever they want, as long as it's clearly stated that there's no guarantees for savings in private banks. We could even run national education campaigns letting everyone know that there's no guarantees with private banks.
I personnaly am worried about the banks, and have moved my money to what I see as a stronger store of wealth, gold in my case... although I know there are problems with that too. Gold seems to be subject to the whims of investors, and the world markets... but at least more can't be printed at will.
It seems that every fiat currency ever used has had its value eroded eventually, until it's worthless... are there any counter examples? (besides current fiat currencies, which haven't reached the end of the life cycle yet,?, i.e being eroded to no value)
In fear of boring AAM contributors to death I am calling this Test Match to an end.That is an extremely good point and question!!!, and one that could probably be debated over for eternity.
Yeah, that is a very distinct possibility.In fear of boring AAM contributors to death I am calling this Test Match to an end.
I believe you make it wrongI make it that I have a win and a draw in the series so far and I look forward to the next match.
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