Boy! I get supporters all over the place: left, middle and right! Go
down to the last paragraph to see what I mean, not that the rest of
the article is any less interesting.

Sabri

++++++++


It is time for comprehensive rescues of financial systems
By Martin Wolf
Published: October 7 2008 19:13 , Financial Times

As John Maynard Keynes is alleged to have said: "When the facts
change, I change my mind. What do you do, sir?" I have changed my
mind, as the panic has grown. Investors and lenders have moved from
trusting anybody to trusting nobody. The fear driving today's
breakdown in financial markets is as exaggerated as the greed that
drove the opposite behaviour a little while ago. But unjustified panic
also causes devastation. It must be halted, not next week, but right
now.

The time for a higgledy-piggledy, institution-by-institution and
country-by-country approach is over. It took me a while – arguably,
too long – to realise the full dangers. Maybe it was errors at the US
Treasury, particularly the decision to let Lehman fail, that triggered
today's panic. So what should be done? In a word, "everything". The
affected economies account for more than half of global output. This
makes the crisis much the most significant since the 1930s.

First of all, the panic must be dealt with. This has already persuaded
some governments to provide full or partial guarantees of liabilities.
These guarantees distort competition. Once granted, however, they
cannot be withdrawn until the crisis is over. So European countries
should now offer a time-limited guarantee (maybe six months) of the
bulk of the liabilities of systemically important institutions. In the
US, however, with its huge number of banks, such a guarantee is
neither feasible nor necessary.

This time-limited guarantee should encourage financial institutions to
lend to one another. If it does not do so, central banks must lend
freely, even on an unsecured basis, to institutions too systemically
significant to be allowed to fail.

By these means, the flow of credit should restart. But governments
cannot allow banks to gamble freely with the public sector's balance
sheet. During the period of the guarantee, governments must exercise
close oversight over the institutions they have decided to protect.

The second priority is recapitalisation. The big lesson of the crises
of recent history – as an excellent chapter in the International
Monetary Fund's latest World Economic Outlook shows – is that
"policymakers should force the early recognition of losses and take
steps to ensure that financial institutions are adequately
capitalised".

Recapitalisation is essential if institutions are to be deemed
creditworthy after the guarantees are withdrawn. Governments should
insist on a level of capitalisation that allows for further
write-offs. They should then either underwrite a rights issue or
purchase preference shares. Either way, governments should expect to
make a profit on their investments when these institutions return to
health, as they should do.

Such recapitalisation is an alternative to forced debt-to-equity
swaps. I do find the latter an attractive idea. Yet today it is sure
to increase the hysteria, unless it can be made credibly
once-and-for-all. Some will also note that my ideas are designed to
avoid a shrinkage of the balance sheets of the core financial system.
Some shrinkage of the financial system is inevitable, however,
particularly in the US and UK. It should be allowed to occur in the
so-called "shadow banking sector".

This leads to a third question: what to do about the bad assets?
Sometimes it makes sense to take such assets from the banks. That is
what the new US "troubled asset relief programme" (Tarp) is designed
to do. Because bad US assets are widely distributed across the world,
the US programme to create a market for these assets – and perhaps
raise their prices to a higher equilibrium level – will benefit many
other banking systems.

Elsewhere, however, the quantity of bad locally generated assets seems
small. Such schemes are then unnecessary. If banks are adequately
recapitalised such schemes are also redundant. Similarly, if banks are
adequately capitalised, concerns about mark-to-market accounting are
less important, since balance sheets can cope with the needed
write-downs. But it may be sensible to state explicitly that
regulators will not focus only on current valuations in determining
the capital requirements.

The biggest question about these proposals is whether governments can
afford them. Some economists argue that many banks are not only too
big to fail, but too big to save. They do so by pointing to ratios of
gross bank liabilities to host-country gross domestic product (see
chart). But what matters is the ratio of worst-case fiscal
recapitalisation to GDP. Unfortunately, even this can be huge.

Consider the UK, where the combined assets of the big five banks is
four times GDP. A recapitalisation equal to 1 per cent of their assets
would cost the government an increase in debt equal to 4 per cent of
GDP and a 5 per cent recapitalisation would cost 20 per cent of GDP.
If any country's banking system started to suffer losses on such a
scale, debt-to-equity swaps might become inescapable. They may now be
the only way forward for Iceland.

Some argue that members of the eurozone have a special challenge:
individually, after all, they have no access to a central bank. The
remarkable recent jumps in spreads between rates on German bunds and
Italian bonds, to a peak of just under 90 basis points, suggests that
markets may agree. But inflation is also a form of default. A country
with a central bank, such as the UK, may well suffer higher long-term
interest rates if doubt grows about its ability to finance needed bank
rescues.

Yet if a recapitalisation of a substantial number of eurozone banks
were needed, some member states might be unable to put up the money.
There would be danger for the rest if that government chose either to
do nothing or to initiate a debt-equity swap. Such actions might then
raise panic everywhere. Fiscal solidarity might prove inescapable. In
any case, co-ordination on how to proceed is essential if a healthy
eurozone banking system is to re-emerge.

This panic is also going to have a big impact on economies. So central
banks,other than the Federal Reserve, should lower interest rates.
Only last week I thought a half-percentage point cut in rates made
sense for the UK. If I were on the monetary policy committee today, I
would argue for a full percentage point. The world has changed,
greatly for the worse.

The finance ministers and central bank chiefs of the Group of Seven
leading high-income countries will soon convene in Washington. For
once, these are the right people. They must travel with one task in
mind: restoring confidence. History will judge their success. These
people may go down as the authors of another great depression. It is a
destiny they must now avoid, for all our sakes.

[EMAIL PROTECTED]

Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2008
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