I am happy to address this
conference, now in its eighth year, and endorse Atlanta Fed
President Jack Guynn's choice of topic. Many of us, with the
benefit of hindsight, have been endeavoring for nearly two years
to distill the critical lessons from the global crises of 1997 and
1998. Your contributions to this analysis are timely and useful.
Knowing that you have touched on
a number of topics over the last few days, I wanted to focus on
some of the issues I raised at the most recent meetings of the IMF
and World Bank; in particular, why the financial turmoil
engendered by disruption in Asia resulted in a crisis longer and
deeper than we expected in its early days. In a sense, I am
turning the question posed by this conference--Do efficient
financial markets contribute to financial crises?--on its head by
asking whether efficient financial markets mitigate financial
crises.
To answer the question, we need
to look at the financial market situation of just over a year ago.
Following the Russian default of August 1998, public capital
markets in the United States virtually seized up. For a time, not
even investment-grade bond issuers could find reasonable takers.
While Federal Reserve easing shortly thereafter doubtless was a
factor, it is not credible that this move fully explained the
dramatic restoration of most, though not all, markets in a matter
of weeks. The problems in our markets appeared too deep-seated to
be readily unwound solely by a cumulative 75 basis point ease in
overnight rates.
Arguably, at least as important
was the existence of backup financial institutions, especially
commercial banks, that replaced the intermediation function of the
public capital markets. As public debt issuance fell, commercial
bank lending accelerated, effectively filling in some of the
funding gap. Even though bankers also moved significantly to risk
aversion, previously committed lines of credit, in conjunction
with Federal Reserve ease, were an adequate backstop to business
financing, and the impact on the real economy of the capital
market turmoil was blunted. Firms were able to sustain production,
and business and consumer confidence was not threatened. A vicious
circle of the initial disruption leading to losses and then
further erosion in the financial sector never got established.
Capital Market Alternatives
What we perceived in the United
States in 1998 may reflect an important general principle:
Multiple alternatives to transform an economy's savings into
capital investment act as backup facilities should the primary
form of intermediation fail. In 1998 in the United States, banking
replaced the capital markets. Far more often it has been the other
way around, as it was most recently in the United States a decade
ago.
When American banks stopped
lending in 1990, as a consequence of a collapse in the value of
real estate collateral, the capital markets were able to
substitute for the loss of bank financial intermediation.
Interestingly, the then recently developed mortgage-backed
securities market kept residential mortgage credit flowing, which
in prior years would have contracted sharply. Arguably, without
the capital market backing, the mild recession of 1991 could have
been far more severe.
Our mild recession in 1991
offers a stark contrast with the long-lasting problems of Japan,
whose financial system is an example of predominantly bank-based
financial intermediation. The keiretsu conglomerate system, as you
know, centers on a "main bank," leaving corporations
especially dependent on banks for credit. Thus, one consequence of
Japan's banking crisis has been a protracted credit crunch. Some
Japanese corporations did go to the markets to pick up the slack.
Domestic corporate bonds outstanding have more than doubled over
the decade while total bank loans have been almost flat.
Nonetheless, banks are such a dominant source of funding in Japan
that this increase in nonbank lending has not been sufficient to
avert a credit crunch.
The Japanese government is
injecting funds into the banking system in order to recapitalize
it. While it has made some important efforts, it has yet to make
significant progress in diversifying the financial system. This
could be a key element, although not the only one, in promoting
long-term recovery. Japan's banking crisis is also ultimately
likely to be much more expensive to resolve than the American
crisis, again providing prima facie evidence that financial
diversity helps limit the effect of economic shocks.
This leads one to wonder how
severe East Asia's problems would have been during the past
eighteen months had those economies not relied so heavily on banks
as their means of financial intermediation. One can readily
understand that the purchase of unhedged short-term dollar
liabilities to be invested in Thai baht domestic loans would at
some point trigger a halt in lending by Thailand's banks if the
dollar exchange rate did not hold. But why did the economy need to
collapse when lending did? Had a functioning capital market
existed, along with all the necessary financial infrastructure,
the outcome might well have been far more benign.
Before the crisis broke, there
was little reason to question the three decades of phenomenally
solid East Asian economic growth, largely financed through the
banking system. The rapidly expanding economies and bank credit
growth kept the ratio of nonperforming loans to total bank assets
low. The failure to have backup forms of intermediation was of
little consequence. The lack of a spare tire is of no concern if
you do not get a flat. East Asia had no spare tires.
Managing Bank Crises
Banks, being highly leveraged
institutions, have, throughout their history, periodically fallen
into crisis. The classic problem of bank risk management is to
achieve an always-elusive degree of leverage that creates an
adequate return on equity without threatening default.
The success rate has never
approached 100 percent, except where banks are credibly
guaranteed, usually by their governments, in the currency of their
liabilities. But even that exception is by no means ironclad,
especially when that currency is foreign. One can wonder whether
in the United States of the nineteenth century, when banks were
also virtually the sole intermediaries, numerous banking crises
would have been as disabling if alternative means of
intermediation were available.
In dire circumstances, modern
central banks have provided liquidity, but fear is not always
assuaged by cash. Even with increased liquidity, banks do not lend
in unstable periods. The Japanese banking system today is an
example: The Bank of Japan has created massive liquidity, yet bank
lending has responded little. But unlike the United States a
decade ago, alternative sources of finance are not yet readily
available.
The case of Sweden's banking
crisis in the early 1990s, in contrast to America's savings and
loan crisis of the 1980s and Japan's current banking crisis,
illustrates another factor that often comes into play with banking
sector problems: Speedy resolution is good, whereas delay can
significantly increase the fiscal and economic costs of a crisis.
Resolving a banking-sector crisis often involves government
outlays because of implicit or explicit government safety net
guarantees for banks. Accordingly, the political difficulty in
raising taxpayer funds has often meant delayed resolution. Delay,
of course, can add to the fiscal costs and prolong a credit
crunch.
Experience tells us that
alternatives within an economy for the process of financial
intermediation can protect that economy when one of those
financial sectors undergoes a shock. Australia serves as an
interesting test case in the most recent Asian financial turmoil.
Despite its close trade and financial ties to Asia, the Australian
economy exhibited few signs of contagion from contiguous
economies, arguably because Australia already had well-developed
capital markets as well as a sturdy banking system. But going
further, it is plausible that the dividends of financial diversity
extend to more normal times as well. The existence of alternatives
may well insulate all aspects of a financial system from
breakdown.
Diverse capital markets, aside
from acting as backup to the credit process in times of stress,
compete with a banking system to lower financing costs for all
borrowers in more normal circumstances. Over the decades, capital
markets and banking systems have interacted to create, develop,
and promote new instruments that improved the efficiency of
capital creation and risk bearing in our economies. Products for
the most part have arisen within the banking system, where they
evolved from being specialized instruments for one borrower to
having more standardized characteristics.
At the point that
standardization became sufficient, the product migrated to open
capital markets, where trading expanded to a wider class of
borrowers, tapping the savings of larger groups. Money market
mutual funds, futures contracts, junk bonds, and asset-backed
securities are all examples of this process at work.
Once capital markets and traded
instruments came into existence, they offered banks new options
for hedging their idiosyncratic risks and shifted their business
from holding to originating loans. Bank trading, in turn, helped
these markets to grow. The technology-driven innovations of recent
years have facilitated the expansion of this process to a global
scale. Positions taken by international investors within one
country are now being hedged in the capital markets of another:
so-called proxy hedging.
Building Financial
Infrastructure
But developments of the past two
years have provided abundant evidence that where a domestic
financial system is not sufficiently robust, the consequences for
a real economy of participating in this new, complex global system
can be most unwelcome.
It is not surprising that
banking systems emerge as the first financial intermediary in
market economies as economic integration intensifies. Banks can
marshal scarce information about the creditworthiness of borrowers
to guide decisions about the allocation of capital. The addition
of capital market alternatives is possible only if scarce real
resources are devoted to building a financial infrastructure--a
laborious process whose payoff is often experienced only decades
later. The process is difficult to initiate, especially in
emerging economies that are struggling to edge above the poverty
level, because of the perceived need to concentrate on high
short-term rates of return to capital rather than to accept more
moderate returns stretched over a longer horizon.
We must continually remind
ourselves that a financial infrastructure is composed of a broad
set of institutions whose functioning, like all else in a society,
must be consistent with the underlying value system. On the
surface, financial infrastructure appears to be a strictly
technical concern. It includes accounting standards that
accurately portray the condition of the firm, legal systems that
reliably provide for the protection of property and the
enforcement of contracts, and bankruptcy provisions that lend
assurance in advance as to how claims will be resolved in the
inevitable result that some business decisions prove to be
mistakes. Such an infrastructure promotes transparency within
enterprises and allows corporate governance procedures that
facilitate the trading of claims on businesses using standardized
instruments rather than idiosyncratic bank loans. But the
development of such institutions almost invariably is molded by
the culture of a society. Arguably the notion of property rights
in today's Russia is subliminally biased by a Soviet education
that inculcated a highly negative view of individual property
ownership. The antipathy to the "loss of face" in Asia
makes it difficult to institute, for example, the bankruptcy
procedures of Western nations, and in the West we each differ
owing to deep-seated views of creditor-debtor relationships.
Corporate governance that defines the distribution of power
invariably reflects the most profoundly held societal views about
the appropriate interaction of parties in business transactions.
It is thus not a simple matter to append a capital markets
infrastructure to an economy developed without it. Accordingly,
instituting convergence across countries of domestic financial
infrastructures or even of the components tied to international
transactions is a very difficult task.
Indeed, weaknesses in financial
infrastructure made Asian banking systems more vulnerable before
the crisis and have impeded resolution of the crisis subsequently.
Lack of transparency coupled with an implicit government guarantee
for banks encouraged investors to lend too much to banks too
cheaply, with the consequence that capital was not allocated
efficiently. Poor bankruptcy laws and procedures have made
recovery on nonperforming bank loans a long and costly procedure.
Moreover, the lack of transparency and of a legal infrastructure
for enforcing contracts and collecting debts in Russia are a prime
cause of the dearth of financial intermediation in Russia at this
time.
Nonetheless, the competitive
pressures toward convergence will be a formidable force in the
future if, as I suspect, additional forms of financial
intermediation are seen as benefiting an economy. Moreover, a
broader financial infrastructure will likely also strengthen the
environment for the banking system and enhance its performance.
A recent study by Ross Levine
and Sara Zervos suggests that financial market development
improves economic performance, over and above the benefits offered
by banking sector development alone. The results are consistent
with the idea that financial markets and banks provide useful, but
different, bundles of financial services and that utilizing both
will almost surely result in a more robust and more efficient
process of capital allocation.
It is no coincidence that the
lack of adequate accounting practices, bankruptcy provisions, and
corporate governance have been mentioned as elements in several of
the recent crises that so disrupted some emerging-market
countries. Had these been present, along with the capital markets
they would have supported, the consequences of the initial shocks
of early 1997 might well have been quite different.
It is noteworthy that the
financial systems of most continental European countries escaped
much of the turmoil of the past two years. And looking back over
recent decades, we find fewer examples in continental Europe of
banking crises sparked by real estate booms and busts or episodes
of credit crunch of the sort I have mentioned in the United States
and Japan.
Until recently, the financial
sectors of continental Europe were dominated by universal banks,
and capital markets are still less well developed there than in
the United States or the United Kingdom. The experiences of these
universal banking systems may suggest that it is possible for some
bank-based systems, when adequately supervised and grounded in a
strong legal and regulatory framework, to function robustly. But
these banking systems have also had substantial participation of
publicly owned banks. Such institutions rarely exhibit the
dynamism and innovation that many private banks have employed for
their, and their economies', prosperity. Government participation
often distorts the allocation of capital to its most productive
uses and undermines the reliability of price signals. But at times
when market adjustment processes might have proved inadequate to
prevent a banking crisis, such a government presence in the
banking system can provide implicit guarantees of resources to
keep credit flowing, even if its direction is suboptimal.
In Germany, for example,
publicly controlled banking groups account for nearly 40 percent
of the assets of all banks taken together. Elsewhere in Europe,
the numbers are less but still sizable. In short, there is some
evidence to suggest that insurance against destabilizing credit
crises has been purchased with a less efficient utilization of
capital. It is perhaps noteworthy that this realization has helped
engender a downsizing of public ownership of commercial banks in
Europe, coupled with rapid development of heretofore modest
capital markets, changes which appear to be moving continental
Europe's financial system closer to the structure evident in
Britain and the United States.
Continental European countries
may gain an additional benefit from the increased development of
their capital markets. With increased concentration of national
banking systems, which will likely be followed by increased
concentration of Europe-wide banking, comes the risk of an
unusually large impact should the health of a megabank become
impaired, causing the bank to curtail its lending. Having
well-developed capital markets would likely help to mitigate these
effects, as more firms would have alternative sources of funds.
Conclusion
Improving domestic banking
systems in emerging markets will help to limit the toll of the
next financial disturbance. But if, as I presume, diversity within
the financial sector provides insurance against a financial
problem turning into economy-wide distress, then steps to foster
the development of capital markets in those economies should also
have an especial urgency. Moreover, the difficult groundwork for
building the necessary financial infrastructure--improved
accounting standards, bankruptcy procedures, legal frameworks, and
disclosure--will pay dividends of their own.
The rapidly developing
international financial system has clearly intensified competitive
forces that have enhanced standards of living throughout most of
the world. It is important that we develop domestic financial
structures that facilitate and protect our international financial
and trading systems, a process that will require much energy and
commitment in the years ahead.