A Taxonomy of Financial Crisis Resolution Mechanisms: Cross-Country Experience

The goals of financial restructuring are to re-establish the creditor-debtor relationships upon which the economy depends for an efficient allocation of capital, and to accomplish that objective at minimal cost. Costs include direct costs to taxpa...

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Main Authors: Calomiris, Charles W, Klingebiel, Daniela, Laeven, Luc
Format: Policy Research Working Paper
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, D.C. 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2004/08/5112352/taxonomy-financial-crisis-resolution-mechanisms-cross-country-experience
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/14154
id okr-10986-14154
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-141542021-04-23T14:03:21Z A Taxonomy of Financial Crisis Resolution Mechanisms: Cross-Country Experience Calomiris, Charles W Klingebiel, Daniela Laeven, Luc ACCOUNTING ACCOUNTING FRAMEWORK ACCOUNTING PRACTICES ACCOUNTING RULES ADVERSE SELECTION AFFILIATED FIRMS ASSET LIQUIDATION ASSET MANAGEMENT ASSET MANAGEMENT COMPANIES ASSETS BAD DEBT BAD DEBTS BALANCE SHEETS BANK BAILOUTS BANK CAPITAL BANK CREDIT BANK DEPOSITS BANK FAILURES BANK LENDING BANK LOANS BANKS BONDS BORROWING CAPITAL ADEQUACY CAPITAL ADEQUACY RATIO CAPITAL ALLOCATION CAPITAL BASE CAPITAL REGULATION CAPITAL REQUIREMENT CAPITAL REQUIREMENTS CAPITAL SHORTFALL CAPITAL STANDARDS CENTRAL BANK COLLATERAL COLLATERALIZATION COMPETITIVENESS CONNECTED LENDING CORPORATE BORROWERS CORPORATE DEBT CORPORATE LENDING CORPORATE RESTRUCTURING CREDIT MARKETS CREDITORS CROSS-COUNTRY EXPERIENCE DEBT DEBT CAPACITY DEBT OVERHANG DEBT RELIEF DEFLATION DEPOSIT INSURANCE DEPOSITORS DEPOSITS DEREGULATION DERIVATIVES DIRECT COSTS FINANCIAL SYSTEMS MONETARY SYSTEMS The goals of financial restructuring are to re-establish the creditor-debtor relationships upon which the economy depends for an efficient allocation of capital, and to accomplish that objective at minimal cost. Costs include direct costs to taxpayers of financial assistance and the indirect costs to the economy that result from misallocations of capital and incentive problems resulting from the restructuring. The authors review cases in which countries employed alternative mechanisms to restructure their financial and corporate sectors. Countries typically apply a combination of tools, including decentralized, market-based mechanisms and government-managed programs. Market-based strategies seek to strengthen the capital base of financial institutions and/or borrowers to enable them to renegotiate debt and resume new credit supply. Government-led restructuring strategies often include the establishment of an entity to which non-performing loans are transferred or the government's sale of financial institutions, sometimes to foreign entrants. Market-based mechanisms can, in principle, resolve coordination problems countries face in the wake of massive debtor and creditor insolvency, with acceptably low direct and indirect costs, particularly when those mechanisms are effective in achieving the desirable objective of selectivity. However, these mechanisms depend for their success on an efficient judicial system, a credible supervisory framework and authority with sufficient enforcement capacity, and a lack of corruption in implementation. Government-managed programs may not seem to depend as much on efficient legal and supervisory institutions for their success, but in fact these approaches, in particular the transfer of assets to government-owned asset management companies, also depend on effective legal, regulatory, and political institutions for their success. Further, a lack of attention to incentive problems when designing specific rules governing financial assistance can aggravate moral hazard problems, unnecessarily raising the costs of resolution. These results suggest that policymakers in emerging market economies with weak institutions should not expect to achieve the same level of success in financial restructuring as other countries, and that they should design resolution mechanisms accordingly. Despite the theoretical attraction of some complex market-based mechanisms, simpler resolution mechanisms that afford quick resolution of outstanding debts, that improve financial system competitiveness, and that offer little discretion to governments are most effective. 2013-06-24T18:39:37Z 2013-06-24T18:39:37Z 2004-08 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2004/08/5112352/taxonomy-financial-crisis-resolution-mechanisms-cross-country-experience http://hdl.handle.net/10986/14154 English en_US Policy Research Working Paper;No.3379 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank World Bank, Washington, D.C. Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper Publications & Research
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
en_US
topic ACCOUNTING
ACCOUNTING FRAMEWORK
ACCOUNTING PRACTICES
ACCOUNTING RULES
ADVERSE SELECTION
AFFILIATED FIRMS
ASSET LIQUIDATION
ASSET MANAGEMENT
ASSET MANAGEMENT COMPANIES
ASSETS
BAD DEBT
BAD DEBTS
BALANCE SHEETS
BANK BAILOUTS
BANK CAPITAL
BANK CREDIT
BANK DEPOSITS
BANK FAILURES
BANK LENDING
BANK LOANS
BANKS
BONDS
BORROWING
CAPITAL ADEQUACY
CAPITAL ADEQUACY RATIO
CAPITAL ALLOCATION
CAPITAL BASE
CAPITAL REGULATION
CAPITAL REQUIREMENT
CAPITAL REQUIREMENTS
CAPITAL SHORTFALL
CAPITAL STANDARDS
CENTRAL BANK
COLLATERAL
COLLATERALIZATION
COMPETITIVENESS
CONNECTED LENDING
CORPORATE BORROWERS
CORPORATE DEBT
CORPORATE LENDING
CORPORATE RESTRUCTURING
CREDIT MARKETS
CREDITORS
CROSS-COUNTRY EXPERIENCE
DEBT
DEBT CAPACITY
DEBT OVERHANG
DEBT RELIEF
DEFLATION
DEPOSIT INSURANCE
DEPOSITORS
DEPOSITS
DEREGULATION
DERIVATIVES
DIRECT COSTS
FINANCIAL SYSTEMS
MONETARY SYSTEMS
spellingShingle ACCOUNTING
ACCOUNTING FRAMEWORK
ACCOUNTING PRACTICES
ACCOUNTING RULES
ADVERSE SELECTION
AFFILIATED FIRMS
ASSET LIQUIDATION
ASSET MANAGEMENT
ASSET MANAGEMENT COMPANIES
ASSETS
BAD DEBT
BAD DEBTS
BALANCE SHEETS
BANK BAILOUTS
BANK CAPITAL
BANK CREDIT
BANK DEPOSITS
BANK FAILURES
BANK LENDING
BANK LOANS
BANKS
BONDS
BORROWING
CAPITAL ADEQUACY
CAPITAL ADEQUACY RATIO
CAPITAL ALLOCATION
CAPITAL BASE
CAPITAL REGULATION
CAPITAL REQUIREMENT
CAPITAL REQUIREMENTS
CAPITAL SHORTFALL
CAPITAL STANDARDS
CENTRAL BANK
COLLATERAL
COLLATERALIZATION
COMPETITIVENESS
CONNECTED LENDING
CORPORATE BORROWERS
CORPORATE DEBT
CORPORATE LENDING
CORPORATE RESTRUCTURING
CREDIT MARKETS
CREDITORS
CROSS-COUNTRY EXPERIENCE
DEBT
DEBT CAPACITY
DEBT OVERHANG
DEBT RELIEF
DEFLATION
DEPOSIT INSURANCE
DEPOSITORS
DEPOSITS
DEREGULATION
DERIVATIVES
DIRECT COSTS
FINANCIAL SYSTEMS
MONETARY SYSTEMS
Calomiris, Charles W
Klingebiel, Daniela
Laeven, Luc
A Taxonomy of Financial Crisis Resolution Mechanisms: Cross-Country Experience
relation Policy Research Working Paper;No.3379
description The goals of financial restructuring are to re-establish the creditor-debtor relationships upon which the economy depends for an efficient allocation of capital, and to accomplish that objective at minimal cost. Costs include direct costs to taxpayers of financial assistance and the indirect costs to the economy that result from misallocations of capital and incentive problems resulting from the restructuring. The authors review cases in which countries employed alternative mechanisms to restructure their financial and corporate sectors. Countries typically apply a combination of tools, including decentralized, market-based mechanisms and government-managed programs. Market-based strategies seek to strengthen the capital base of financial institutions and/or borrowers to enable them to renegotiate debt and resume new credit supply. Government-led restructuring strategies often include the establishment of an entity to which non-performing loans are transferred or the government's sale of financial institutions, sometimes to foreign entrants. Market-based mechanisms can, in principle, resolve coordination problems countries face in the wake of massive debtor and creditor insolvency, with acceptably low direct and indirect costs, particularly when those mechanisms are effective in achieving the desirable objective of selectivity. However, these mechanisms depend for their success on an efficient judicial system, a credible supervisory framework and authority with sufficient enforcement capacity, and a lack of corruption in implementation. Government-managed programs may not seem to depend as much on efficient legal and supervisory institutions for their success, but in fact these approaches, in particular the transfer of assets to government-owned asset management companies, also depend on effective legal, regulatory, and political institutions for their success. Further, a lack of attention to incentive problems when designing specific rules governing financial assistance can aggravate moral hazard problems, unnecessarily raising the costs of resolution. These results suggest that policymakers in emerging market economies with weak institutions should not expect to achieve the same level of success in financial restructuring as other countries, and that they should design resolution mechanisms accordingly. Despite the theoretical attraction of some complex market-based mechanisms, simpler resolution mechanisms that afford quick resolution of outstanding debts, that improve financial system competitiveness, and that offer little discretion to governments are most effective.
format Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper
author Calomiris, Charles W
Klingebiel, Daniela
Laeven, Luc
author_facet Calomiris, Charles W
Klingebiel, Daniela
Laeven, Luc
author_sort Calomiris, Charles W
title A Taxonomy of Financial Crisis Resolution Mechanisms: Cross-Country Experience
title_short A Taxonomy of Financial Crisis Resolution Mechanisms: Cross-Country Experience
title_full A Taxonomy of Financial Crisis Resolution Mechanisms: Cross-Country Experience
title_fullStr A Taxonomy of Financial Crisis Resolution Mechanisms: Cross-Country Experience
title_full_unstemmed A Taxonomy of Financial Crisis Resolution Mechanisms: Cross-Country Experience
title_sort taxonomy of financial crisis resolution mechanisms: cross-country experience
publisher World Bank, Washington, D.C.
publishDate 2013
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2004/08/5112352/taxonomy-financial-crisis-resolution-mechanisms-cross-country-experience
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/14154
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