BoE/Tucker: Competition, the pressure for returns, and stability

17 October 2012

Paul Tucker considers the factors driving excessive risk-taking in the financial system leading up the crisis, and outlines some of the key aspects of the reform of banking.

"The changes are profound”, says Tucker.  But in “overhauling the ‘rules of the game’ for global finance”, he emphasises that the goal of the international authorities is not to abolish risk or risk-taking. “We need to find broadly the right balance between, on the one hand, safety and, on the other hand, the contribution that sound and honest finance can make to economic prosperity.”

Tucker notes the way increasing leverage fed upon itself in the run-up to the current crisis, and says it poses “deep but pressing questions about the efficiency and effectiveness of capital markets in monitoring and pricing risk”.  And while ‘Too Big To Fail’ is “the biggest problem we have to crack”, he says moral hazard isn’t a complete explanation.  Rather, it was compounded by agency problems, myopia, complexity obscuring the risks in the system as a whole, and accommodative global monetary conditions.  Together, these factors combined, he says, to create “a heady mix ... which the prevailing regulatory regime was singularly ill equipped to address, and in some respects had done much to create through inadequate capital requirements and an absence of liquidity requirements.  In fact, a toxic mix.”

Tucker highlights six key aspects of the domestic and international reform programme pertinent to the banking industry:

In conclusion, Tucker states that “work by the international central banking and regulatory community to make the system safe and sound has made real progress in recent years, but it is not complete and absolutely must continue with energy … We may not be able to abolish the occasional waves of optimism that grip humanity and the tendency to excess they set off. But we can and must dampen their effects on the financial system and economy… Markets will, in time, forget about the risks, but the system will be safer if we succeed in building official institutions that do not forget. Parliament can underpin that by holding us to account in this endeavour, as it does on monetary policy – incentives matter in the official sector too. That will make for a safer and sounder financial system that can meet the abiding needs of the economy as a whole. And, to those of you here today, I would say that the Bank believes what it always believed: that sound and honest finance is not only essential for the economy, it will be good for the City too.”

Full speech


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