Don
Kohn, deputy to former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan
Greenspan at the time when the financial crisis broke,
has won himself an unexpected and unusual job. He
has been appointed to a new committee which has the
mandate to guide the United Kingdom (note not the
US) to financial stability. Speaking to British MPs
at a confirmation hearing he chose to confess his
guilt. According to the Financial Times (May 17, 2011)
, he said: ''I deeply regret the pain that was caused
to millions of people in the US and around the world
by the financial crisis ... Most of the blame should
be on the private sector: the people that bought and
sold those securities, on the credit rating agencies
that rated them. But I also agree that the cops weren't
on the beat. The regulators were not as alert to the
risks as they could have been and, to the extent they
saw the risks, were not as forceful in bringing them
to the attention of management, or taking actions,
as they could have been.''
Kohn's honesty contrasts with that of his ex-boss,
Alan Greenspan, who, in the past and more recently,
has repeatedly chosen to defend the actions of the
Federal Reserve he headed. As far back as early 2008,
having noted that ''the US (housing) bubble was close
to median world experience and the evidence that monetary
policy added to the bubble is statistically very fragile'',
he concluded as follows: ''I do have an ideology...
My view of how the efficiency of global capitalism
has evolved over the decades as new evidence has appeared
contradicts some earlier judgments and confirms others.
I have been surprised by the fierceness of investors
in retrenching from risk since August. My view of
the range of dispersion of outcomes has been shaken
but not my judgment that free competitive markets
are the unrivalled way to organise economies. We have
tried regulation ranging from heavy to central planning.
None meaningfully worked. Do we wish to retest the
evidence?'' (Financial Times, March 16 and April 6,
2008).
That arrogance in the face of the evidence of either
incompetence or complicity on the part of the Fed
has only been strengthened in recent times. Barely
a couple of months back (Financial Times March 29,
2011) he chose to argue that the Dodd-Frank Act in
the United States, which was based on the correct
perception ''that much of what occurred in the market
place leading up to the Lehman Brothers bankruptcy
was excess'', was wrong in believing that the causes
of the crisis could be addressed with the regulatory
framework it seeks to introduce. This in his view
was because ''The financial system on which Dodd-Frank
is being imposed is far more complex than the lawmakers,
and even most regulators, apparently contemplate.
We will almost certainly end up with a number of regulatory
inconsistencies whose consequences cannot be readily
anticipated.''
Mr. Greenspan represents the few seeking to scuttle
even the diluted effort, which the Dodd-Frank bill
represents, to regulate markets and prevent systemic
failure. He is one among those who has been able to
ensure that despite widespread agreement three years
back on the need to rein in financial markets with
a new regulatory framework, no significant progress
has since been achieved. Even the few steps forward
that legislation like the Dodd-Frank Act seeks to
take are now being stalled. Among the arguments being
advanced to support the case that the Act is bound
to fail if implemented are: (i) that it would result
in a breakdown of markets even in areas where they
serve the economy well; and (ii) that it is impossible
to have global consensus on strong regulation, so
that efforts to rein in markets in any one country
such as the US, would merely encourage firms to indulge
in regulatory arbitrage and transfer some activities
abroad or would shift of such activity away from US
firms to competing institutions from other countries.
In sum, the complexity and, consequent, opaqueness
of markets and the fact of global interconnectedness
ensure that ''heavy'' regulation would merely distort
markets and is bound to fail.
Many have argued against both of these positions with
Barney Frank (of Dodd-Frank fame) noting (Financial
Times, April 3 2011) that: ''The assertion that regulators
can never get ''more than a glimpse'' of the financial
system is self-fulfilling if regulators are not given
the mandate or the tools to do so, or if they fail
to use the tools they have.'' However, the view that
regulation is difficult to strengthen because of the
impossibility of achieving global consensus is currently
receiving much support. The issue has received attention
because the European Union, faced with the possibility
of either sovereign default or bank failure (or a
combination of the two), is under pressure to show
that it is instituting regulatory measures that can
deal with problems that are all too current. On the
other hand the US has dealt with the problems faced
by its financial system (even if not its economy)
for the time being. The resulting tardiness in US
progress aided by opposition from those Greenspan,
has angered the European Commission because it fears
European players would lose out if it implements some
of its plans, including that of raising capital adequacy
substantially.
Reflecting this contradiction is a recent spat between
the EU and the US over requiring banks to hold more
capital in forms that can help cover unforeseen losses
in the future, but earn less returns today. At the
end of May, the European Commissioner in charge of
financial markets, Michel Barnier, reportedly wrote
(Financial Times, June 1 2011) to US Treasury Secretary,
Tim Geithner, demanding that the US should toughen
the content and quicken the pace of implementation
of new banking rules. Citing areas like capital requirements
(where the US is still to fully implement the older
Basel II norms, whereas the EU promises to legislate
to implement the new Basel III) and limits on bonuses
for bank executives, Barnier suggested that the US
was falling behind the EU because of the latitude
it gives banks and the tardy implementation of even
diluted rules. The casualty, in his view, was the
effort to ensure a global level playing field.
The US Treasury has, as expected, hit back. It argues
that it is the US that is committed to strengthening
capital standards, whereas it the EU that is giving
banks the freedom to game the system in various ways.
It holds that what is important is not the design
and scale of executive compensation, but whether it
encourages risk-taking or not. And it feels that in
areas such as the trading of derivatives, it is the
EU that is behind the US. The United Kingdom too has
been subjected to criticism for its proposed light-touch
oversight, aimed at protecting the size and profitability
of its all-too-import City of London.
At issue also is the proposal being discussed by the
Financial Stability Board, consisting of financial
regulators from leading economies, to impose an additional
capital surcharge on ''systemically important financial
institutions'' (Sifis) or large interconnected banks.
They are to be required to hold additional top-tier
capital (of around 3 per cent in addition to the 7
per cent recommended under Basel III) to cover unforeseen
losses. Banks are opposing this proposal on the grounds
that it would reduce profits and stifle innovation.
But US regulators seem to be backing the move. Daniel
Tarullo, one of the Fed governors involved in strengthening
financial regulation, has not only backed the case
for a surcharge on Sifis, but even indicated that
it could be significantly higher than 3 per cent.
The Dodd-Frank law too requires more stringent capital
adequacy norms for large, interconnected banks.
However, when markets responded to Tarullo's statement
by weakening bank share values, Tim Geithner once
again turned his guns at the EU and UK, arguing that
regulators there were undercutting the US effort at
strengthening regulation. He said that the US government
is committed not only to reducing risk within its
own borders, but also to minimising ''the chances
that it simply moves to other markets around the world.''
In his strongly-worded statement (Financial Times,
June 6 2011) he noted: ''The United Kingdom's experiment
in a strategy of light-touch regulation to attract
business to London away from New York and Frankfurt
ended tragically. That should be a cautionary note
for other countries deciding whether to try to take
advantage of the rise in standards in the United States.''
However, the strident tone was partly aimed at defending
dilution of Tarullo's proposal, on the grounds that
the surcharge imposed on Sifis need not be ''excessive''.
Thus, since global consensus is difficult to achieve
in a world of differentially placed economies, attention
to the presumed loss of competitiveness due to regulatory
arbitrage, only strengthens those like Greenspan who
argue against the toughening of regulation. If regulation
to help prevent future crises of the kind experienced
three years back has to go forward, the emphasis should
be on credible evidence from three areas. The first
is that the financial innovation and proliferation
that followed financial liberalisation since the 1980s
has diverted capital from productive investment to
speculation and adversely affected growth in the real
economy. In fact, there is little evidence even in
the advanced economies that it has contributed to
growth. The second is that the globalisation of finance
has not helped but only damaged global economic coordination
and management, by worsening global imbalances. And,
third, that a less integrated and more fragmented
world economy, with differently designed and differentially
stringent regulation of finance, may be bad for finance
capital and banker bonuses but not for the rest of
the economy. Once this evidence is taken into account,
attention can be focused on the task at hand and an
appropriate regulatory framework designed. If it is
not, the fear of being undercut by the other would
be exploited by those who want to preserve the status
quo to scupper the already much delayed effort to
rein in finance.
Note: This article was published
in the Frontline Volume 28 , Issue 13 June 18-July
01 2011.
July
6, 2011.
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