Prioritizing a Financial Bailout
A government regulator must decide which of two failing financial institutions to rescue to prevent a widespread economic crisis. Institution X is the nation's largest consumer bank by asset size, holding millions of individual savings and mortgage accounts. Institution Y is a mid-sized firm that is the central counterparty for a vast web of complex financial contracts connecting all other major banks. If only one can be saved, which institution's failure would likely pose a more immediate and severe threat to the stability of the entire financial system? Justify your answer based on the nature of systemic risk.
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Economics
Economy
Introduction to Macroeconomics Course
Ch.8 Economic dynamics: Financial and environmental crises - The Economy 2.0 Macroeconomics @ CORE Econ
The Economy 2.0 Macroeconomics @ CORE Econ
CORE Econ
Social Science
Empirical Science
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Evaluation in Bloom's Taxonomy
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Imagine two financial institutions. Firm A has $2 trillion in assets, primarily in straightforward loans to individuals and businesses. Firm B has only $500 billion in assets but is a central counterparty for a vast network of complex financial contracts involving nearly every other major bank. Which firm's sudden collapse would likely pose a greater systemic risk to the entire financial system, and why?
Analyzing Systemic Risk: The Lehman Brothers Case
The primary reason the collapse of Lehman Brothers in 2008 triggered a global financial crisis was that it was the largest financial institution in the world at the time, holding more assets than any of its competitors.
Evaluating Systemic Risk in Hypothetical Banks
Analyzing Systemic Risk: Size vs. Interconnectedness
A mid-sized investment bank, which acts as a central party for a vast network of complex financial contracts with numerous other global banks, suddenly declares bankruptcy. What is the most probable and immediate consequence for the wider financial system?
Match each description of a financial institution with the most accurate assessment of its systemic risk to the wider financial system.
Prioritizing a Financial Bailout
Critiquing a Financial Regulation Policy
A financial regulator states, "To prevent another major crisis, our primary focus must be on monitoring the sheer size of financial institutions. The banks with the most assets pose the greatest threat to the system." Which of the following historical lessons provides the strongest counterargument to this regulator's focus?