1,888 research outputs found

    Monetary policy, the provision of financial stability and banking supervision

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    This note discusses why it might be desirable for a central bank to have a microprudential supervisory role and why a single micro-prudential supervisor might be better than a collection of national supervisors. It argues that central banks should not be macro-prudential supervisors. It describes the skills that are necessary when a central bank is the provider of financial stability and the bank supervisor, as well as the monetary policy maker. It describes the institutional features of a central bank that are necessary if providing financial stability and bank supervision are to be regarded as legitimate roles for the central bank in a democratic society. It suggests how the accountability that is necessary for carrying out these political tasks can be squared with the independence required for monetary policy

    Changing of the guards

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    On 31 October 2011, after eight years in office, Mr Jean-Claude Trichet’s term as President of the ECB will come to an end. The aim of this note is to evaluate the presidency of the Mr Trichet and to discuss the challenges that his successor will face

    Bank resolution regimes

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    The euro area sovereign debt crisis has been exacerbated by an on-going banking problem and the sovereign debt crisis has worsened the prospects for euro area banks. This makes it urgent that policy makers find a solution to the problem of dealing with troubled financial institutions. This paper discusses the challenges associated with designing bank resolution regimes

    Deposit guarantee schemes

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    This note examines the position of insured and uninsured bank deposit holders in Europe in light of the recent EFTA court ruling and events in Cyprus. It considers the merits of further harmonisation of existing national deposit guarantee schemes and the adoption of a single deposit guarantee scheme. Further progress toward a single resolution mechanism requires the specification how uninsured deposit holders are to be treated in the event of a bank failure. This note also considers the issues of whether uninsured depositors should be bailed in and, if so, where they should be in the pecking order and also how much flexibility national authorities should have in deciding their treatment

    How to restructure the international financial architecture

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    To lower the likelihood of financial crises: Securitisation should be regulated to restore proper incentives for banks. The euro area should adopt a regulatory system based on objectives. The short-comings of the Basel II accord should be addressed. While difficult, ways must be found to incentivise financial firms to change the way they compensate employees. The euro area should have a single supervisor and regulator charged with ensuring financial stability. To prevent liquidity crises: There should be good systems of deposit insurance. Countries without important reserve currencies should not have large internationally exposed banking systems. To decrease the likelihood of exchange rate crises, the powers in Brussels and Frankfurt should allow potential future members of the euro area to unilaterally adopt the euro without jeopardising their chances of future membership in the euro area. should not enforce the exchange rate criterion of the Maastricht Treaty. Early warning of a financial crisis is unlikely to be best provided by the IMF might be provided by an independent committee of experts and individual market participants International cooperation in developing crisis management measures and disseminating this knowledge is desirable; funding these measures must be left to the national governments. Managing a crisis Requires writing off bad assets: Central banks should learn how use auctions to value non-traded securities. Requires short-term liquidity provision to and recapitalisation of viable financial firms: Countries should not have banking sectors that are to big to rescue. International coordination to avoid beggar-thy-neighbour regulatory anpolicies and exchange rate policies

    Eligible central bank collateral in times of serious financial distress

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    On 15 October the ECB massively expanded the set of securities that it accepts as collateral. All securities should be accepted as collateral, given severe enough valuations and haircuts. The ECB should be more transparent in explaining how it values illiquid securities as collateral. The ECB could use a reverse auction to value securities but it should avoid outcomes with fire sale prices. Crisis conditions mean that the Eurosystem could need recapitalisation; an automatic arrangement to provide this should be in place

    The role of the ECB in financial assistance programmes

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    In this note I describe the proper role for a well-designed central bank in resolving bank and sovereign debt crises: ensuring that markets and financial institutions, including sovereigns, remain liquid. I consider how much revenue the ECB can raise without be inflationary and how it can mobilise this revenue in support of the financial assistance programmes for illiquid but potentially solvent sovereigns

    Quantitative easing and currency wars

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    To much hysteria from the rest of the world, the US has announced the launching of a new round of quantitative easing combined with a maturity twist. In the first part of this note I explain how this operation will work and why it is unlikely to greatly enhance US competitiveness. In the second part of the note I explain what the global reaction is really about and why policy makers are reacting the way they are

    Non-standard policy measures: a first assessment

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    In this note I discuss the effect of the ECB’s new long-term refinancing operations (LTROs) on bank lending to the real economy and on sovereign debt markets. I also discuss the implication of its change in collateral policy

    A systemic risk warning system

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    Economists largely neglected systemic risk in the financial sector. This column discusses how governments should gather data about systemic risk and assess its implications. It says the new European Systemic Risk Board is far from the ideal – it is too big, too homogeneous, and lacks independence
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