A Taxonomy of Financial Crisis Resolution Mechanisms: Cross-Country Experience
The goals of financial restructuring are to re-establish the creditor-debtor relationships upon which the economy depends for an efficient allocation of capital, and to accomplish that objective at minimal cost. Costs include direct costs to taxpa...
Main Authors: | , , |
---|---|
Format: | Policy Research Working Paper |
Language: | English en_US |
Published: |
World Bank, Washington, D.C.
2013
|
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2004/08/5112352/taxonomy-financial-crisis-resolution-mechanisms-cross-country-experience http://hdl.handle.net/10986/14154 |
Summary: | The goals of financial restructuring are
to re-establish the creditor-debtor relationships upon which
the economy depends for an efficient allocation of capital,
and to accomplish that objective at minimal cost. Costs
include direct costs to taxpayers of financial assistance
and the indirect costs to the economy that result from
misallocations of capital and incentive problems resulting
from the restructuring. The authors review cases in which
countries employed alternative mechanisms to restructure
their financial and corporate sectors. Countries typically
apply a combination of tools, including decentralized,
market-based mechanisms and government-managed programs.
Market-based strategies seek to strengthen the capital base
of financial institutions and/or borrowers to enable them to
renegotiate debt and resume new credit supply.
Government-led restructuring strategies often include the
establishment of an entity to which non-performing loans are
transferred or the government's sale of financial
institutions, sometimes to foreign entrants. Market-based
mechanisms can, in principle, resolve coordination problems
countries face in the wake of massive debtor and creditor
insolvency, with acceptably low direct and indirect costs,
particularly when those mechanisms are effective in
achieving the desirable objective of selectivity. However,
these mechanisms depend for their success on an efficient
judicial system, a credible supervisory framework and
authority with sufficient enforcement capacity, and a lack
of corruption in implementation. Government-managed
programs may not seem to depend as much on efficient legal
and supervisory institutions for their success, but in fact
these approaches, in particular the transfer of assets to
government-owned asset management companies, also depend on
effective legal, regulatory, and political institutions for
their success. Further, a lack of attention to incentive
problems when designing specific rules governing financial
assistance can aggravate moral hazard problems,
unnecessarily raising the costs of resolution. These
results suggest that policymakers in emerging market
economies with weak institutions should not expect to
achieve the same level of success in financial restructuring
as other countries, and that they should design resolution
mechanisms accordingly. Despite the theoretical attraction
of some complex market-based mechanisms, simpler resolution
mechanisms that afford quick resolution of outstanding
debts, that improve financial system competitiveness, and
that offer little discretion to governments are most effective. |
---|