Introduction Flashcards

1
Q

What are the main economic roles of retail and commercial banks ?

A
  • Offer loans to the real sector

* Provide liquidity and payment services to depositors

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2
Q

Why do banks exist ? (2)

A
  • Convenience of denomination

* Frictions due to asymmetric information

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3
Q

What is the convenience of denomination ?

A

Depositors are small, while borrowers tend to be large
⇒ Banks offer deposits and loans in convenient unit sizes
⇒ Important in practice but not so interesting

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4
Q

What are the frictions due to asymmetric information ?

A

Some agents have private information. E.g. borrowers know more about their projects than lenders
⇒ Incomplete financial markets
⇒ Adverse selection (ex-ante) and moral hazard (ex-post)
⇒ Financial intermediaries mitigate some of these frictions

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5
Q

What do banks perform to mitigate the frictions due to asymmetric information ?

A

They perform maturity transformation and monitor their borrowers.

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6
Q

Why do banks take deposits with short maturities ?

A

Deposits are easy to value and hence liquid.

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7
Q

Why do banks offer loans with long maturities ?

A

⇒ Asymmetricity of information make loans are hard to value for outsiders and thus illiquid
⇒ Value of a bank loan may depend on the monitoring performed by the bank

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8
Q

What are the flip sides of maturity transformation and monitoring ?

A

• Maturity transformation exposes banks to liquidity risk
⇒ Banks are inherently unstable and prone to liquidity crises

• Asymmetric information and the need to monitor the
borrowers render bank loans hard to value for outsiders
⇒ Bank assets are opaque
⇒ If a bank experiences a liquidity crisis or even fails, liquidating the bank’s assets may be very costly
⇒ Bank failures have huge economic costs

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9
Q

Why do banking crises have large external costs ?

A
  • Risk of financial contagion

* Refinancing problems in the real sector

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10
Q

What do the government do to avoid the costs of a banking crisis that may be too big to be politically acceptable ?

A

Government safety nets like deposit insurance, lending of last resort, and bailouts

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11
Q

What does it mean when a bank is “too big to fail” ?

A

Large banks enjoy implicit government

guarantees as they are deemed too important to let them fail

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12
Q

What kind of frictions may government safety nets have ?

A

For instance moral hazard, i.e. incentives for the banks to take excessive risks at the publics’ expense

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13
Q

Why are the questions of why and how to regulate banks especially relevant for Switzerland ?

A

The Swiss banking sector is :
• Highly concentrated
• Of great macroeconomic importance

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