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Bank Leverage, Welfare, and Regulation

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Hellwig,  Martin F.
Max Planck Institute for Research on Collective Goods, Max Planck Society;

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Citation

Admati, A. R., & Hellwig, M. F. (2019). Bank Leverage, Welfare, and Regulation. In D. Arner, E. Avgouleas, D. Busch, & S. L. Schwartz (Eds.), Systemic Risk in the Financial Sector – Ten Years after the Great Crash, Centre for International Governance Innovation (pp. 2017-233). Waterloo, ON, Canada: Centre for International Governance Innovation.


Cite as: https://hdl.handle.net/21.11116/0000-000C-C176-5
Abstract
We take issue with claims that the funding mix of banks, which makes them fragile and crisis-prone, is efficient because it reflects special liquidity benefits of bank debt. Even aside from neglecting the systemic damage to the economy that banks’ distress and default cause, such claims are invalid because banks have multiple small creditors and are unable to commit effectively to their overall funding mix and investment strategy ex ante. The resulting market outcomes under laissez-faire are inefficient and involve excessive borrowing, with default risks that jeopardize the purported liquidity benefits. Contrary to claims in the literature that “equity is expensive” and that regulation requiring more equity in the funding mix entails costs to society, such regulation actually helps create useful commitment for banks to avoid the inefficiently high borrowing that comes under laissez-faire. Effective regulation is beneficial even without considering systemic risk; if such regulation also reduces systemic risk, the benefits are even larger.