July 19, 2017

Not just China needs to allocate capital to the more productive, dynamic and employment-generating parts of the economy

Sir, Eswar Prasad, a professor at Cornell University and senior fellow at the Brookings Institution, writes: “Fixing the financial system is not just about managing risks and avoiding disaster, but also about allocating capital to the more productive, dynamic and employment-generating parts of the economy.”, “How to fix China’s unstable financial system” July 19.

How do you do that, not only in China but everywhere, with bank regulators who do not care one iota about the efficient allocation of credit to the real economy, but only about banks avoiding what is perceived as risky?

Especially since 2004’s Basel II, banks have been allowed to multiply their capital with many times more the net risk-adjusted margins when investing in something “safe”, like the past and the present, like sovereigns, the AAArisktocracy and residential houses, than when investing in something “riskier”, like the future, like SMEs and entrepreneurs.

That has completely distorted credit allocation and for no particularly good reason, since there is never ever major bank crisis that result from excessive exposures to something ex ante perceived as risky when placed on banks’ balance sheets.

@PerKurowski