3.1 The Sustainability of the Financial Services System Flashcards
Sustainable development definition
Development that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs
Three main elements to sustainability:
- Environmental sustainability
- Social sustainability
- Economic sustainability
Sustainable financial system definition
One in which the provision of basic financial services can continue into the long term
What happened in the Wall Street Crash of 1929?
- People had been buying stocks and shares in vast quantities, causing share prices to rocket.
- The ‘bubble’ was unsustainable - when it burst prices came down, businesses failed and individuals became bankrupt
Why did the failure of Lehman Brothers have an impact on other banks?
It was very big and owed large amounts to other businesses who failed in turn when they could not recover their funds
Why would borrowers be uncertain in the event of a bank failing?
The new company that takes over the bank along with the debts may impose new terms making debt unaffordable
Impacts of the recession on the Government:
Less money raised in tax because:
- Fewer working and paying income tax
- Fewer spending and paying VAT
- Firms are making lower profits and so paying less corporation tax
Paying out more money in unemployment benefits so public sector accounts will go into deficit and the Government will have to borrow and reduce borrowing by increasing taxes and cutting public spending
Systemic risk definition
Risk affecting the stability of the financial system as a whole
Systemic risk is highest under which circumstances?
- When financial providers are large
- When the large providers work very close with each other and become interconnected
What is the name given to very large firms?
Systemically important financial institutions
Financial contagion definition
When debt works its way through the global financial system as the problems of one group of institutions infects the network
What did financial authorities try to tell the media when Northern Rock failed?
That they bank was safe and only in trouble because of the ‘run on the bank’
What did the Government offer as compensation to customers of the Northern Rock?
A guarantee that they would reimburse any depositor who lost money in Northern Rock
What are the for and against arguments about whether a government should bail out a failing bank?
- There is a need to prevent failure of a large bank
- Saving a bank simply passes its debts to the state and transfers the problem to the taxpayer
What is moral hazard?
Less-than-prudent management decisions as a result of an expectation that the bank will be bailed out