Banking and the state

Banks provide not one but two vital services. Bank deposits are the preferred form of safe assets used for transactions, and bank loans allow businesses to undertake risky endeavors. However, this creates a tension in bank business: deposit-holders require safety for bank liabilities to be liquid; w...

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Main Author: Jackson, Timothy
Published: Cardiff University 2018
Online Access:https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.768042
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-7680422019-04-03T06:16:05ZBanking and the stateJackson, Timothy2018Banks provide not one but two vital services. Bank deposits are the preferred form of safe assets used for transactions, and bank loans allow businesses to undertake risky endeavors. However, this creates a tension in bank business: deposit-holders require safety for bank liabilities to be liquid; while loan-holders want the freedom to take profitable business risks. A widely-used policy to guarantee the liquidity of bank deposits is the government provision of deposit insurance. This thesis considers some of the relative benefits and costs of deposit insurance relative to an alternative of `narrow banking'. This policy argues that a single bank liability structure cannot optimally provide both liquidity and credit. Instead, these two services should be provided by separate entities. These entities could share an owner, provided the safe `narrow' business can be credibly ring-fenced from the risky `wide' bank. Narrow banks issue safe, short-term, debt which can be used for transactions and are invested solely in safe assets so as not to necessitate insurance. To prevent runs, we suggest that wide banks issue longer-term equity contracts to fund risky business credit. Savers are informed of risks up-front and updated through regular markings-to-market. This thesis considers the ability of a narrow banking system to provide liquidity and credit.Cardiff Universityhttps://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.768042http://orca.cf.ac.uk/118618/Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
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description Banks provide not one but two vital services. Bank deposits are the preferred form of safe assets used for transactions, and bank loans allow businesses to undertake risky endeavors. However, this creates a tension in bank business: deposit-holders require safety for bank liabilities to be liquid; while loan-holders want the freedom to take profitable business risks. A widely-used policy to guarantee the liquidity of bank deposits is the government provision of deposit insurance. This thesis considers some of the relative benefits and costs of deposit insurance relative to an alternative of `narrow banking'. This policy argues that a single bank liability structure cannot optimally provide both liquidity and credit. Instead, these two services should be provided by separate entities. These entities could share an owner, provided the safe `narrow' business can be credibly ring-fenced from the risky `wide' bank. Narrow banks issue safe, short-term, debt which can be used for transactions and are invested solely in safe assets so as not to necessitate insurance. To prevent runs, we suggest that wide banks issue longer-term equity contracts to fund risky business credit. Savers are informed of risks up-front and updated through regular markings-to-market. This thesis considers the ability of a narrow banking system to provide liquidity and credit.
author Jackson, Timothy
spellingShingle Jackson, Timothy
Banking and the state
author_facet Jackson, Timothy
author_sort Jackson, Timothy
title Banking and the state
title_short Banking and the state
title_full Banking and the state
title_fullStr Banking and the state
title_full_unstemmed Banking and the state
title_sort banking and the state
publisher Cardiff University
publishDate 2018
url https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.768042
work_keys_str_mv AT jacksontimothy bankingandthestate
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