lundi 25 mai 2009

Martin Wolf on the Need to Rein in Finance

MW a été brillant depuis le tout début de la crise, avec d'autant plus de mérite qu'il y parvient tout en étant à la fois britannique et éditorialiste au FT. Ces deux qualités ne sont a priori pas compatibles avec un examen critique du capitalisme financier de ces dernières années...

 
 

Envoyé par guillaume e via Google Reader :

 
 

via naked capitalism de Yves Smith le 21/05/09

I always enjoy reading the Financial Times' editor, Martin Wolf, but I sometime forget how refreshing and pointed he can be when he decides to let loose at a deserving target. Today's lesson is the almost ludicrous efforts of the financial services industry to explain why the debacle that they just foisted on all of us isn't sufficient cause to put it on a choke chain.

Wolf pillories a report produced by some leading lights of the UK's banking industry. Its main failing, as Wolf points out, is that the industry has already captured Alistair Darling, chancellor of the exchequer, who sponsored the effort and sat on the committee. The verdict was pre-deetermined: "to examine the competitiveness of financial services globally and to develop a framework on which to base policy and initiatives to keep UK financial services competitive".

Ulp. Darling lives in a parallel universe, preoccupied with saving the perps who took down the economy with their recklessness. But he is hardly alone in how badly he has been captured by the industry.

Wolf has a remarkably straightforward recommendation.. The industry produces extenalities, like polluters, so tax it. I've long been a fan of Tobin taxes without being able to prove my pet suspicion, that too much ease of trading benefits intermediaries more than the principals, by encouraging more speculation than is needed to lubricate markets. Wolf provides another rationale. And he dismisses the notion that innovation is ever and always good (radiation tonics were innovative too, and killed people) and that determined regulators cannot restrain big financial players.

From the Financial Times:
The UK has a strategic nightmare: it has a strong comparative advantage in the world's most irresponsible industry. So now, in the wake of the biggest financial crisis since the 1930s, the UK must ask itself a painful question: how should the country manage the cuckoo sitting in its nest?

The question is inescapable. London is one of the world's two most important centres of global finance. Its regulators have, as a result, an influence on the world economy out of proportion to the country's size. In the years leading up to the crisis, that influence was surely malign: the "light touch" approach led the way in a regulatory race to the bottom.

The fiscal costs of this crisis will be comparable to those of a big war....Loss of jobs and incomes will also scar the lives of hundreds of millions of people around the world.

All this occurred, in part, because institutions replete with highly qualified and highly rewarded people were unable or unwilling to manage risk responsibly....This is a time for self-examination.

A recent report on the future of UK international financial services...fails to provide such self-examination...the report's remit was "to examine the competitiveness of financial services globally and to develop a framework on which to base policy and initiatives to keep UK financial services competitive".

If you ask the wrong question, you will get the wrong answer. The right question is, instead, this: what framework is needed to ensure that the operation of the financial sector is compatible with the long-run health of the UK and world economies?

Quite simply, the sector imposes massive negative externalities (or costs) on bystanders. Thus, the recommendation "that the financial sector be allowed to recalibrate its activities according to the sentiments and demands of the market" is wrong. A market works well if, and only if, decision-makers confront the consequences of their decisions. This is not – and probably cannot be – the case in finance: certainly, people now sit on fortunes earned in activities that have led to unprecedented rescues and the worst recession since the 1930s. Given this, the industry has become too big. If implicit and explicit guarantees and externalities, including volatility, were fully charged, the sector would surely shrink.

So how should one manage a sector that produces such "bads"? The answer is: in the same way as any polluting activity. One taxes it. At this point, the authors of the report will surely ask: "How can you suggest taxing a sector so vital to the UK economy?" The answer is: easily. Financial services generate only 8 per cent of gross domestic product. They are more important for taxation and the balance of payments. But this tax revenue turns out to be perilously volatile. True, in 2007, the last year before the crisis, the UK ran a trade surplus of £37bn in financial services, partially offsetting an £89bn deficit in goods. But smaller net earnings from financial services would have generated a lower real exchange rate and more earnings elsewhere. Given the costs imposed by the financial sector, a more diversified economy would have been healthier. Such sacrilegious ideas are, of course, not to be found in the Bischoff report.

How then should the UK approach policy towards the sector? I would suggest the following guiding ideas.

First, the UK needs to make global regulation work. It should discourage regulatory arbitrage even if it expects to gain in the short run.

Second, it must, in particular, help ensure that owners and managers of financial institutions internalise most of the costs of their actions.

Third, it must reject egregious special pleading from the industry. The sector argues that moving derivatives trading on to exchangesmight damage innovation. So what? Maximising innovation is a crazy objective. As in pharmaceuticals, a trade-off exists between innovation and safety. If institutions threaten to take trading activities offshore, banking licences should be revoked.

Fourth, while trying to create a stable and favourable environment for business activities, the UK should try to diversify the economy away from finance, not reinforce its overly strong comparative advantage within it.

Fifth, UK authorities need to ensure that the risks run by institutions they guarantee fall within the financial and regulatory capacity of the British state. They should not let the country be exposed to the risks created by inadequately supported and under-regulated foreign institutions. At the very least, they should not undermine other governments' efforts to regulate their own institutions.

The "old normal" was simply unsustainable. The "new normal" must be very different. It is far from clear that the industry and government recognise this grim truth.

 
 

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