June 05, 2008

Free the banks from the chaperones and get the party going!

Sir Charles Goodhart´s and Avinash Persaud´s “A party popper’s guide to financial stability” June 5 reads like the desperation of a garage fixer to fix something with whatever epoxy he can lay his hand on.

I have myself often proposed a progressive tax on banks, based on the-bigger-you-are-the-more-it-will-hurt-if-you-fall-on-me principle but, what on earth do they mean by taxing the growth rate of bank assets, which is what raising capital requirements mean? That slow growing banks can just sit back and trade growth allotments, like if bank assets were carbon type contaminants?

No instead of worrying so much about the possible hangovers why do they not worry more about making the party better. The current risk adverseness implied in the minimum capital requirements based on risk and as measured by the credit rating agencies, have the markets playing boring and unproductive minuets, like consumer finance dressed up as “risk free” securitizations.

The world is clamouring for decent jobs, and if the banks are to help us create them, they need to be given more freedom and responsibility. In that sense, set the capital requirements for banks at a fixed percentage of assets and get the chaperones out of their hair, so that we can get more of that risky salsa that when if times comes for a hangover, makes it at least more bearable... since the party was great!