Evaluating Regulatory Impact on Financial Stability
Consider two banks, each with $100 million in assets. Bank A is financed with $5 million from its owners (equity) and $95 million in borrowed funds. Bank B is financed with $15 million from its owners and $85 million in borrowed funds. Suppose an economic shock causes the value of each bank's assets to decrease by $10 million. Analyze the consequences for both banks and explain which bank's initial financial structure poses a greater risk of imposing costs on the public (e.g., through taxpayer-funded bailouts).
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Introduction to Macroeconomics Course
Ch.8 Economic dynamics: Financial and environmental crises - The Economy 2.0 Macroeconomics @ CORE Econ
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Analysis in Bloom's Taxonomy
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Incentives and Societal Risk in Banking
A key concern for financial regulators is that large financial institutions might take on excessive risks, assuming that if these risks lead to failure, the government will be forced to provide a bailout to prevent a wider economic crisis. This situation imposes a potential cost on taxpayers. Which of the following policies is designed to mitigate this problem by forcing the institution's owners to bear a greater share of the potential losses themselves?
Bank Capital and Societal Costs
Increasing a bank's equity requirement primarily benefits the bank's depositors by guaranteeing their funds, with little to no effect on the broader economy or taxpayers.
Bank Equity and Societal Risk
Match each banking concept with the description that best explains its relationship to societal risk and taxpayer costs.
A country's financial regulators significantly increase the amount of their own funds that large banks must use to finance their operations, relative to borrowed funds. What is the primary intended effect of this regulatory change on the broader society?
Evaluating Regulatory Impact on Financial Stability
A political candidate argues, "Requiring large banks to fund their operations with more of their own money, as opposed to borrowed funds, is a flawed policy. It primarily protects the bank's wealthy owners and does little to shield taxpayers from the costs of a potential financial crisis." From an economic standpoint, which of the following is the most accurate assessment of this argument?
Consider a policy that significantly increases the financial deductible that a driver must personally pay in the event of a car accident they cause. The intended effect is to encourage safer driving, thereby reducing the overall number of accidents that impose costs and risks on other people. This policy's underlying principle is most similar to which of the following banking regulations?