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Our Banking System is a Giant House of Cards
Institute for New Economic Thinking ^ | 21 April 2015 | Lynn Parramore inteviews Anat Admati

Posted on 05/03/2015 1:17:50 PM PDT by Lorianne

Lynn Parramore: How would you describe the problem of Too Big to Fail banks. Whey does it matter to an ordinary person?

Anat Admati: Too Big to Fail is a license for recklessness. These institutions defy notions of fairness, accountability, and responsibility. They are the largest, most complex, and most indebted corporations in the entire economy.

We all have to be really alarmed by the fact that not only do we still have such institutions, but many of them are ever-larger and more complex and at least as dangerous, if not more so, than they were before the financial crisis.

They are too big to manage and control. They take enormous risks that endanger everybody. They benefit from the upside and expose the rest of us to the downside of their decisions. These banks are too powerful politically as well.

As they seek profits, they can make wasteful and inefficient loans that harm ordinary people, and at the same time they might refuse to make certain business loans that can help the economy. They can even break the laws and regulations without the people responsible being held accountable. Effectively we're hostages because their failure would be so harmful. They're likely to be bailed out if their risks don't turn out well.

Ordinary people continue to suffer from a recession that was greatly exacerbated or even caused by recklessness in the financial system and failed regulation. But the largest institutions, especially their leaders — even in the failed ones — have suffered the least. They're thriving again and arguably benefitting the most from efforts to stimulate the economy.

So there's something wrong with this picture. And there's also increasing recognition that bloated banks and a bloated financial system – these huge institutions—are a drag on the economy.

LP: Have we made any progress in dealing with the problem?

AA: The progress has been totally unfocused and insufficient. Dodd-Frank claims to have solved the problem and it gives plenty of tools to regulators to do what needs to be done (many of these tools they actually already had before). But this law is really complex and the implementation of it is very messy. The lobbying by the financial industry is a large part of the reason that the law has been implemented so poorly and inefficiently with so much difficulty. We are failing to take simple steps and at the same time undertaking extremely costly steps with doubtful benefits.

So we've had far from enough progress. We are told things are better but they are nowhere near what we should expect and demand. Much more can be done right now.

LP: Banks, compared to other businesses, finance an enormous portion of their assets with borrowed money, or debt – as much as 95 percent. Yet bankers often claim that this is perfectly fine, and if we make them depend less on debt they will be forced to lend less. What is your view? Would asking banks to rely more on unborrowed money, or equity, somehow hurt the economy?

AA: Sometimes when I don't have time to unpack everything I use a quote from a book called Payoff: Why Wall Street Always Wins by Jeff Connaughton. He relates something Paul Volcker once said to Senator Ted Kaufman: "You know, just about whatever anyone proposes, no matter what it is, the banks will come out and claim that it will restrict credit and harm the economy…It's all bullshit."

Here's one obvious reason such claims are, in Volcker's vocabulary, bullshit: Lending suffered most when banks didn't have enough equity to absorb their losses in the crisis — and then we had to bail them out. The loss they suffered on the subprime fiasco was relatively small by comparison to losses to investors when the Internet bubble burst, but there was so much debt throughout the system, and indeed in the housing markets, and so much interconnection that the entire financial system almost collapsed. That's when lending suffered. So lending and growth suffers when the banks have too little equity, not too much.

Now, banks naturally have some debt, like deposits. But they don't feel indebted even when they rely on 95 percent debt to finance their assets. No other healthy company lives like that, and nobody, even banks, needs to live like that — that's the key. Normally, the market would not allow this to go on; those who are as heavily indebted feel the burden in many ways. The terms of the debt become too burdensome for corporations, and reflect the inefficient investment decisions made by heavily indebted companies. But banks have much nicer creditors, like depositors, and with many explicit and implicit guarantees, banks don't face trouble or harsh terms. They only have to convince the regulators to let them get away with it. And they do.

So the abnormality of this incredible indebtedness is that they get away with it. There's nothing good about it for society. If they had more equity then they could do everything that they do better —more consistently, more reliably, in a less distorted fashion.

Today's credit market is distorted. A key reason is that bankers love the high risk and chase returns. They are less fond of some of the lending where they are needed the most — like business lending, for example. Instead, most people get many credit cards in the mail and too many people live on expensive revolving credit. Effectively, the poor may end up subsidizing the credit card of the person who pays on time and has zero interest (and we all end up paying the enormous fees merchants are charged). So we can have too much or too little lending and live through inefficient booms and busts. Part of the reason for that is that banks are continually living on the edge in a way that nobody else in the economy would, and regulations meant to correct it are insufficient and flawed in their design.

LP: Banking has been a very profitable business. Is it profitable because the risks are born by the taxpayer? Do you think the bank bonus system is part of the problem?

AA: Yes, banking is partly profitable because of subsidies from taxpayers. There are probably other reasons, and not all of them good ones, in terms of the way competition works and other things. The bonus system encourages recklessness, and recklessness increases the value of the subsidies from taxpayers. Bankers are effectively paid to gamble.

It is profitable for the banks to become big even when this is inefficient, because they can do so with subsidized borrowing on easy terms. Guarantees, explicit and implicit, are a form of free or subsidized insurance. We don't control whether what banks do with the cheap funding benefits the economy or just bankers and some of their investors. We must reduce these large subsidies that end up rewarding recklessness and harming us. (See Admati's July 2014 testimony before Congress on bank subsidies).

LP: We often hear about financial innovations that helped bring the global economy to its knees in 2008. Back in December, Congress rolled back a key taxpayer protection concerning derivatives, which Robert Lenzner of Forbes Magazine called a "Christmas present for the banks." What do Americans need to know about derivatives? How do they affect the Too Big to Fail problem?

AA. The Christmas present was just one more small thing in a much bigger problem. The largest financial firms in America can hide an enormous amount of risk in derivatives. That's very dangerous because it makes banks more interconnected, since much of the derivatives trading happens within the financail system. It creates a house of cards — a very fragile system.

We also have bankruptcy laws in this country that perversely give unusual priority to derivatives contracts and other reckless practices.

Derivatives exacerbate Too Big to Fail dramatically because there's so much opacity in the system. Policy-makers get scared into bailing our or guaranteeing a lot of their commitments made in those markets because they won't quite know the consequences of letting them fail. It's very intimately related to Too Big to Fail. It's as if they hold a gun to your head. You don't konw whether they have bullets so you may get scared into paying the ransom.

LP: Is breaking up the banks is a solution?

AA: People say those words but what does it mean? How would you do it? That's the big problem. Banks are multiple times bigger than most of the corporations you think of as big. I once made a mistake rushing through a HuffPost piece in 2010 saying that Jamie Dimon wants to be as big as Walmart. Well, at the time, JP Morgan was already 10 times bigger than Walmart by assets! When it comes to the financial sector, big is really big. People don't even appreciate how big we're talking about. Nobody else gets to be as big, and in fact, In other parts of the economy, companies that get so big often break up on their own. But that doesn't happen in banking partly because of the perverse subsidies taxpayers provide.

The most sensible approach is to force banks and other financial institutions to have more equity, which is actually going to expose their inefficiencies and bring more investor pressure for a break-up to happen naturally without us doing it actively. Regulators can also put significantly more pressure on banks to simplify their structure and divest unnecessary lines of businesses such as commodities (energy, aluminum, etc.). The size appears unmanageable and makes regulation difficult.

LP: What would make banking regulation more effective?

AA: First of all there could be simpler regulation in some places and some cost-ineffective things could be used a bit less. Right now, we know too little about the risk and we have too little margin for error. We must reduce the opacity and increase the safety margins dramatically. Regulators make it complicated because we are unnecessarily living at the edge of a cliff all the time. We live so dangerously! There's no need for that. We are told that we have to live like that, but it's that's completely false. The system has to be made a lot more resilient. Then we can worry less and sleep better.

In addition to making things simpler, it's very important that we are able to see more of the risk and then to enforce much stronger and simpler rules. And, of course, regulators need to be watching where the risks are going. They should not believe that just because the risks are off the accounting balance sheets that they are gone. That was a trick to get around regulations and get around accounting rules in cases like Enron. A lot of the risks were hiding — but they can be traced. Some laws that are counterproductive and make regulation harder should also be examined, including the tax code that encourages debt over equity, and the bankruptcy law that overly protects certain financial practices.

LP: If we don't deal with the problem of Too Big to Fail, what happens?

AA: An ordinary person doesn't realize it, but the impact of this unhealthy system on them happens every day. It's doesn't feel as acute as something like leakage from a nuclear facility because harm from the financial system is a little more abstract. You only see it when it blows. But it's an unhealthy, inefficient, bloated and dangerous system. Because this system is so fragile, it can implode again, and our options next time will be dire again. We will either suffer a lot or bail out the system to suffer a little bit less.

I recently shared with my students a quote by the Rothschild brothers of London, writing to associates in New York in 1863: "The few who understand the system will either be so interested in its profits or be so dependent upon its favours that there will be no opposition from that class, while the great body of people, mentally incapable of comprehending the tremendous advantage that capital derives from the system, will bear its burdens without complaint, and perhaps without even suspecting that the system is inimical to their interests."

This is a great quote! We get tricked into thinking that we have a great financial system because we have our credit cards and whatnot. We don't see the enormous risks that are taken in derivatives markets and some of the other practices that can topple the entire system again and which extracts fees and bonuses. The truth is that we can have a safer system that serves the economy and society better. But getting there requires that better laws and regulations are implemented and enforced. The system will not correct itself; we must demand that policymakers do a better job for the public.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Government
KEYWORDS: banks; conspiracytheories; economy; ntsa; rothschilds; stockmarket; tinfoiledagain
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1 posted on 05/03/2015 1:17:50 PM PDT by Lorianne
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To: Lorianne

Oh no, all of that was fixed after the bailout. A congresscritter said so on the radio.


2 posted on 05/03/2015 1:34:16 PM PDT by Wolfie
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To: Lorianne
I like the free market -- or as free as we can get. But what we have is nothing like a free market. What we have is completely artificial and propped up by Big Government. It's Big Government helping Big Business (which includes Big Banks) and Big Business helping Big Government.

What we have is Fascism. And "too big to fail" describes an ugly New World Order.

3 posted on 05/03/2015 1:36:55 PM PDT by ClearCase_guy (Democrats. They just ... say stuff.)
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To: Lorianne
Too Big to Fail is a license for recklessness.

That it is -- if a bank or any other business knows it's considered Too Big to Fail, it knows it can do literally anything -- engage in any practice -- and the taxpayers will bail it out -- again and again and again.

We must abandon Too Big to Fail. Let the chips fall where they may.

If it's Too Big to Fail, it's Too Big to Succeed.

4 posted on 05/03/2015 1:41:55 PM PDT by TBP (Obama lies, Granny dies.)
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To: Lorianne

That house of cards has been being built since the inception of the Federal Reserve, the so-called independent government agency.


5 posted on 05/03/2015 1:42:04 PM PDT by PoloSec ( Believe the Gospel: how that Christ died for our sins, was buried and rose again)
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To: Wolfie

Yeah, many believe just that. Don’t worry, someone will be along to tell us all is just fine.


6 posted on 05/03/2015 1:42:43 PM PDT by SaveFerris (Be a blessing to a stranger today for some have entertained angels unaware)
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To: TBP

We must regulate them down to a “won’t hurt the rest of us if they fail” size.


7 posted on 05/03/2015 1:46:55 PM PDT by Wolfie
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To: Lorianne; All
This is another 17th Amendment-related issue imo.

More specifically, since the states had mandated in the Constitution that the states were to use only gold and silver for legal tender (1.10.1), the Senate should either have killed the Gold Reserve Act bill, or should have led Congress to propose an approprate amendment to the states for issuing paper currency.

The 17th Amendment needs to disappear along with a bunch of corrupt senators.

8 posted on 05/03/2015 1:49:50 PM PDT by Amendment10
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To: TBP
that's why Soros had the never to say he'd invest a billion in Ukraine if its’ backed by the IMF.
WTH kind of investment is that?
i’ll invest 50k in bulletproof underwear if its backed 100 percent by the IMF
9 posted on 05/03/2015 1:50:23 PM PDT by dp0622 (Franky Five Angels: "Look, let's get 'em all -- let's get 'em all now, while we got the muscle.")
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To: Lorianne

Could you imagine what things would be like w/o central or government banks. It’s been so long that no one can conceive of such a solution. We always talk of more and better regulations, but where has that got us?
Private banks could still engage in fractional reserve lending under some form of oversight in addition to market forces. Governments would still have a treasury and take in taxes.
The market could devise instruments that would work as currency and subsystem for PMs if necessary.
The only reason to have central banks is to give central bankers control.


10 posted on 05/03/2015 2:01:40 PM PDT by grumpygresh (Democrats & GOPe delenda est. President zero gave us patient zero.)
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To: Lorianne

The populist solution would be to do what progressive Republican Teddy Roosevelt did: break up big businesses. Fight monopolies, which threaten competition.

He broke up Standard oil, and yet the parts continue to this day as some of the largest businesses in the country and world (Exxon, Chevron, Mobil).

I would like to listen to a Republican candidate describe why we should end the era of “too big to fail” organizations, in several industries, like banking, motor vehicles, oil & energy, retailing, communications & entertainment, Pharmaceuticals etc.

Take note that Comcast recently backed down from their acquisition of Verizon, because they feared regulatory forces might deem the merger a threat to competition.


11 posted on 05/03/2015 2:04:40 PM PDT by truth_seeker
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To: Lorianne

12 posted on 05/03/2015 2:23:14 PM PDT by SandRat (Duty - Honor - Country! What else needs said?)
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To: ClearCase_guy
There is no FREE market when too big to fail are ALWAYS bailed out by tax payers. It is win win for the big banks. They can gamble and if they win, great profits. If they lose, there are tax payers to bail them out.
13 posted on 05/03/2015 2:30:52 PM PDT by entropy12 (Prediction: Walker will win Iowa primary, NH is wide open, SC looking good for Cruz)
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To: Lorianne

The obvious solution for conservatives is simple: “If a corporation is ‘too big to fail’, then it is likewise ‘too big to continue’.”

In past, the courts have said that size alone is not a good enough reason to bust up a corporation. This idea must be reassessed. If a corporation is so large that its failure could significantly harm the economy as a whole, then an orderly, methodical means must be legislated to reorder that corporation until it is no longer a threat.

There is no inherent unfairness to this, except for the loss of power of a handful of people on a given corporation’s executive board. And that is no reason to not do this.


14 posted on 05/03/2015 2:36:38 PM PDT by yefragetuwrabrumuy ("Don't compare me to the almighty, compare me to the alternative." -Obama, 09-24-11)
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To: Lorianne

much balderdash here


15 posted on 05/03/2015 2:39:09 PM PDT by bert ((K.E.; N.P.; GOPc.;+12, 73, ..... Obama is public enemy #1)
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To: Lorianne

Palaces of ponzicians...debt slavemasters digitizing, printing, and doling out the pieces of cheese for us rats on the treadmills. UNaccountable totalitarians with monopoly money, enticing the unsuspecting, devaluing the responsible.

Too big to fail: The psyops of psychopaths.


16 posted on 05/03/2015 2:40:17 PM PDT by PGalt
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To: Lorianne

The basic depository banking system of the US should be conservative, staid, boring and safe. High risk investments should not in any way be tangled up with our basic banking system. Those who want greater risk and greater possible rewards should have their own investment firms which are totally separate from depository banks.

That is the conservative way in banking, not some anything goes, high risk, regulation free gambling house that endangers our entire financial system and everyone who uses depository banks.


17 posted on 05/03/2015 3:01:37 PM PDT by Will88
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To: Lorianne

.
Yup!

Whatcha gunna do about it?
.


18 posted on 05/03/2015 3:08:07 PM PDT by editor-surveyor (Freepers: Not as smart as I'd hoped they'd be)
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To: Lorianne

bttt


19 posted on 05/03/2015 6:33:53 PM PDT by expat_panama
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To: bert
much balderdash here

You're being kind, I'd have used a different word beginning with "b".  This article is to economics as Al Gore's movie is to meteorology, pure mindless politics.  There's no science to global warming and there's no economics in this article.. 

20 posted on 05/03/2015 6:52:44 PM PDT by expat_panama
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