Jérôme Sgard, Sciences-Po/ Ceri. Bankruptcy Law and the Lender of Last Resort: two Generic Instruments of Crisis Management

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Jérôme Sgard, Sciences-Po/ Ceri Bankruptcy Law and the Lender of Last Resort: two Generic Instruments of Crisis Management

1. How they work Bankruptcy is a procedure that: Starts with a declaration by a judge Suspends immediately a large number of the rules of the contractual game (eg acceleration of debts, control over assets, imprisonment, etc) Impose a single forum to all parties and given rules of decision-making Is typically close by another decision by the judge like the confirmation of majority vote >>> Its overall effect is to allocate losses and rewrite contracts

1. How they work The Lender of Last Resort (LLR) Is not a procedure, or a collective action, but a unilateral intervention It is operated by a Central bank, not a court It has a systemic dimension, whereas bankruptcy is a retail institution Its key objective is to prevent a default by a bank (typically), rather than curing it Hence the LLR works from within market transactions, whereas Bankruptcy comes in after they brake up

2. How they compare What Bkcy and the LLR have in common Both are core State institutions: they are typically never privatized or sub-contracted They are old institutions, established before the emergence of the progressive, regulatory, interventionnist (etc) state Bky emerged in the Medieval Italian trading cities and was part of the first liberal compact, see for instance Sienna, Florence, Lucca, etc. The LLR emerged in the Britain in the 1860s They also have a long history of evolution and mutation, in conjunction with eg the financial system and the political system

2. How they compare What Bkcy and the LLR have in common They are exclusive one to the other, yet complementary, though (in good doctrine) never supplementary They are the two generic institutions of crisis-management or, more generally, the ultimate regulators of market discipline And: both respond to problems of asymmetric, incomplete information (with full info, you dont need them).

2. How they compare Liquidity LLR is about Money and the payment system Defending market coordination It preserves contracts and the distribution of private wealth Solvency Bkcy is about Property rights Substituting market coordination by a judicial coordination It rewrites contracts and reallocate private wealth It is the easy way to address a financial crisis, it may mitigate or compensate individual losses It is a hard-hitting, sociallyviolent instrument though only on a case-by-case basis

2. How they compare LLR fails when It distabilizes monetary policy (ask Trichet, Bernanke, etc) Is operated by a second-tier Central Bank, with open capital account It bail out firms (or countries) which debt should be restructured (TBTF syndrom) Bkcy fails when The money market is volatile, hence sorting out firms is difficult The secondary market for capital goods is illiquid, so returns are low It is manipulated by classes of creditors It excludes some debtors, eg in the informal sector

3. How they coordinate The Bagehot rule (1871) The Central Banks lends freely against the best collateral at punitive interest rates To illiquid but solvent banks

3. How they coordinate The Bagehot rule (1871) The Central Banks lends freely against the best collateral at punitive interest rates To illiquid but solvent banks In other terms: the LLR requires an effective Bankruptcy procedure though it may work ex post

3. How they coordinate The IMF experience It became de facto a kind of LLR as soon as it was immerged in a decentralized, competitive, intl financial markets (about e. 1970s) Immediately had to address the bail-out risk, and called for a restructuring/ negotiated rule during the 1980s Was overwhelmed by the intl. capital markets crisis of the 1990s, especially when confronted with a TBTF (or TNTF) country Proposed a variety of exit roads Insurance schemes (contingent credit line, etc) A Bankruptcy Court for Sovereigns

3. How they coordinate The ECB experience First was confronted to a systemic crisis in the private, financial sector; and was part of a most impressive, collective international LLR Second was confronted to a funding crisis by some member-states, with systemic implications Supported massively the market (bought T. Bonds) Coordinated with Imf & EU, i.e. working as a true LLR with two multilateral lenders, under Imf conditionality

3. How they coordinate The ECB experience Third entered a complex tactical game with EUmember states around a restructuring procedure that would help: Protect the money issuing function Restore, or establish a solvency rule Yet, it is primarily confronted to the systemic (liquidity) implication of the first step in any bankruptcy rule suspending payment and exiting market. That is: the transition from LLR to Bkcy