Banking
Crises and Bank Rescues:
When Regulators Become Soft to Get Tough
Professor Janet
Mitchell
(Facultés
Universitaires de Saint-Louis and CEPR)
In recent years
banking crises have afflicted many countries throughout the world.
Regulators’ responses to these banking crises have varied widely,
ranging from multiple bank closures (Argentina and the U.S.A) to
widespread bank rescues (Norway, Sweden, Japan, Hungary, Czech
Republic and Bulgaria). Why do regulators in some instances apply
tough policies to troubled banks and in other instances rescue many of
them? Janet Mitchell, in a lunchtime
briefing organized for CEPR corporate members, argues that the
notion of ‘too-many-to-fail’ explains multiple bank rescues. If
too many banks in an economy are financially troubled, the social
costs of closing all of them down may exceed the costs of rescuing
them.
Yet, regulators
may realize that they risk being trapped in a situation of
‘too-many-to-fail,’ and they may take measures to eliminate this
risk. One such measure is to weaken bank regulation. By weakening
regulation (e.g., definitions of bank solvency) regulators diminish
their own ability to detect troubled banks but simultaneously increase
the credibility of the threat to be tough with the financially
troubled banks that are actually discovered. Becoming soft in
regulation can permit regulators to be tough in banking crises.
Regulators’
responses to banking crises thus depend upon a number of factors,
including how the banks themselves have handled their bad loans; what
type of banking regulation was in place prior to the crisis; and the
total number of banks suffering financial distress. Troubled banks
often attempt to hide their loan losses by passively rescheduling
loans in default. This behavior can exacerbate a crisis: regulators
may not detect the problem until the crisis has become very serious or
widespread. The number of banks suffering from financial distress is
also important. Whereas the well accepted notion of
‘too-big-to-fail’ explains rescues of certain individual banks
observed in different countries, it cannot explain the simultaneous
rescue of several banks. ‘Too-many-to-fail’ captures the notion
that multiple bank closures can generate high social costs—arising
from reductions in output of firms that are deprived of finance and
from significant resource costs required to impose tough policies on
many troubled banks—that exceed the costs of rescues.
Banks’ handling
of their bad loans will depend upon the nature of existing bank
regulation and upon on bankers’ expectations regarding the
regulators’ policy response to a banking crisis. The expectation
that troubled banks will be rescued can encourage banks to passively
roll over loans. In response to the fear of being trapped in a
situation of ‘too-many-to-fail’, regulators may actually weaken
regulation. Applying a tough policy to a smaller number of troubled
banks (and allowing some troubled banks to go undiscovered) can be
less costly than detecting more troubled banks but being forced to
rescue them. This result suggests that in emerging market economies
and in economies in transition where the risk of systemic banking
crises is high, it may be impossible for regulators to implement tough
banking regulations without running the risk of a bailout of the
entire banking system. The outcome may be only a gradual evolution of
banking regulation over time, as the risk of a systemic banking crisis
subsides.
Notes
for Editors:
CEPR
is a network of over 450 Research Fellows based throughout Europe, who
collaborate through the Centre in research and its dissemination. CEPR
helps its Research Fellows to develop projects, obtain their funding,
administer them and disseminate their results. The Centre’s research
ranges from open economy macroeconomics to trade policy, from the
economic transformation of Central Eastern Europe to regionalism in
the world economy. The views expressed in the discussion meeting are
the author’s own. CEPR is an ESRC Resource Centre.
Janet
Mitchell is Professor of Economics at ECARE, Université Libre de
Bruxelles and a Research Fellow in CEPR’s Transition Economies
programme.
Strategic
Creditor Passivity, Regulation and Bank Bailouts
Discussion
Paper No.1780
Janet Mitchell, Université Libre de Bruxelles
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