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Need for System Thinking in Finance

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April 24, 2019

What is the issue?

  • Defaults and stresses are being witnessed across banks, mutual funds, non-banking financial companies (NBFCs), the bond market, and real estate.
  • It is high time that the government understands the importance of system approach than the current micro-prudential regulation.

How does micro-prudential regulation work?

  • Micro-prudential regulation is the job of pushing financial firms to cap their failure probability.
  • It involves writing rules that prevent excessive risk taking by banks.
  • E.g. there may be an objective that no more than 2% of banks should fail per decade
  • It ensures that the failure probability of any one bank does not exceed 2% over a 10-year horizon.
  • With mutual funds, there is no possibility of firm failure.
  • So SEBI's concern in micro-prudential regulation is to ensure that net asset value (NAV) is always reported correctly and promises of redemption are always met.
  • To achieve the objectives, micro-prudential regulation thinks deeply about one financial firm at a time.
  • It identifies a minimal set of interventions which achieve its narrow objective.
  • However, this approach avoids central planning of products and processes.

How did the recent crisis evolve?

  • Credit stress in non-financial firms (e.g. infrastructure and real estate) surfaced in 2008.
  • Early bankruptcy solves the problem, but when this is not done, the amount of debt increases significantly.
  • With stressed borrowers, new debt is required to pay off old debt.
  • The balance sheet grows, as default is staved off by paying old lenders using money borrowed from new lenders.
  • For many years, weak borrowers were given more debt by banks.
  • When the banks got conscious about their over-leveraging, at first, a new funding channel was opened up.
  • Thereby, the mutual funds, NBFCs and the bond market came in.
  • But these too have run into difficulties in the last one year.
  • Now India has a group of stressed borrowers running out of ways to recover, and four stressed components of the financial system.
  • The problems of borrowers, real estate prices, bond market, mutual funds, NBFCs and banks are reinforcing each other now.

What lies ahead?

  • The components of the recent problems are not to be seen in isolation.
  • It is difficult for a fragmented financial regulatory architecture to obtain information, make root cause analysis, and solve problems.
  • Also, there is a natural bias for micro-prudential regulators to postpone the recognition of a problem.
  • What is needed is a system thinking that diverges from the view of one firm at a time i.e. micro-prudential regulation.
  • There is a need to see the financial system from a high-level perspective, and see the pressures and relationships.
  • Such an approach could significantly acknowledge the interconnections among the shortfalls and address the problem in a better way.
  • An informal team that looks into the various components of the financial system holistically may work.

 

Source: Business Standard

Author: Shankar IAS Academy Bangaluru

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