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Bank Competition and Financial Stability: A General Equilibrium Exposition

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Title: Bank Competition and Financial Stability: A General Equilibrium Exposition


1
Bank Competition and Financial Stability A
General Equilibrium Exposition
  • Gianni De Nicolò
  • International Monetary Fund and CESifo
  • Marcella Lucchetta
  • University of Venice, Department of Economics
  • The views expressed in this paper are those of
    the authors and do not necessarily represent
    those of the IMF.

2
Motivation
  • The issue of whether bank competition should be
    restrained has a long history in the bank
    regulatory debate, and has resurfaced in the
    aftermath of the recent financial crisis
  • The existing theoretical banking literature does
    not offer much guidance to this debate, since
  • a) it is based on partial equilibrium
  • b) focuses on the relationship between banks
    risk of failure and competitive conditions

3
The inconclusive results of the partial
equilibrium literature (1)
  • When banks are modeled as limited liability firms
    raising funds from insured depositors, choose the
    risk of their investment, and this choice is
    unobservable (moral hazard), then the standard
    risk-shifting argument applies
  • More competition for funds implies a higher risk
    of bank failure
  • Many contributions Keeley (1990), Hellmann
    Murdock and Stiglitz, (2000), etc.

4
The inconclusive results of the partial
equilibrium literature (2)
  • When banks are modeled a la Cournot as limited
    liability firms raising funds from insured
    depositors and lending to entrepreneurs under
    moral hazard, then
  • More competition (an increase in the number of
    banks) implies a LOWER risk of bank failure if
    project risks are perfectly correlated (Boyd and
    De Nicolò, 2005), or a U-shaped relationship
    between the number of banks and bank risk of
    failure (Martinez-Meira and Repullo, 2010) if
    project risks are not perfectly correlated

5
General equilibrium
  • Restraining bank competition seems at odds with
    the implications of some general equilibrium
    models
  • Allen and Gale (2004) perfect competition is
    Pareto optimal under complete markets, and
    constrained Pareto optimal under incomplete
    markets, with financial instability as a
    necessary condition for optimality
  • Boyd, De Nicolò and Smith (2004) analogous
    results in a general equilibrium monetary economy
    with aggregate liquidity risk under low
    inflation.
  • Yet, these papers do not model bank risk choices
    under moral hazard, which we introduce in general
    equilibrium.

6
The key unanswered normative question is
  • Is there a trade-off between bank competition and
    financial stability?
  • Is a lower level of risk of bank failure
    necessarily desirable in a welfare sense?
  • In this paper we address the following question
  • What is the welfare-maximizing level of
    competition and the associated optimal level of
    bank risk of failure?

7
Key features of our model
  • We introduce all features of partial equilibrium
    models that find that competition increases
    banks risk of failure
  • Agents occupational choices between being
    bankers or depositors determine endogenously the
    allocation of resources to productive activity
    and bank intermediation
  • We consider no deposit insurance and deposit
    insurance How the presence of deposit insurance
    affects the welfare ranking of competitive
    conditions?

8
Key Result
  • Perfect bank competition is
  • constrained Pareto optimal.
  • This result holds without and with deposit
    insurance
  • It holds even though competitive banks risk of
    failure is higher than banks enjoying monopoly
    rents
  • It holds under any social cost function
    associated with costs of banks failures not
    internalized by banks that are consistent with
    essential bank intermediation.
  • There is no trade-off between bank competition
    and financial stability
  • WHY?

9
The key resource re-allocation mechanism at work
The general equilibrium effect of bank
competition
  • As bank competition for funds increases, the
    relative return of intermediated investment
    (deposits) relative to shares of bank ownership
    increases.
  • This causes a shift of resources from investment
    in costly bank intermediation to investment in
    productive assets intermediated by banks.
  • The resulting increase in expected output (net of
    monitoring and production costs) is large enough
    to offset any reduction in the expected return on
    investment due to the higher risk of failure of
    banks operating under more intense competition.

10
Plan
  • The model
  • Equilibrium
  • Definition of competition
  • Deposit insurance
  • Welfare
  • Welfare implications
  • Conclusion

11
The Model Time, Endowments and Preferences
  • There are 2 dates 0 and 1
  • A continuum of risk neutral agents on
  • Every agent has an endowment of 1 of date 0
    goods
  • All agents have access to a risk-free technology
    which yields per unit invested.
  • At date 0 agents decide either to become bankers
    or depositors.

12
Banks (1)
  • If an agent chooses to become a banker, she
    forgoes her initial endowment in exchange of the
    ability to form coalitions, called banks, which
    operate a risky project
  • The project is indexed by the probability of
    success
  • An investment in a risky project yields
    with probability P, and 0 otherwise
  • Banks choose P and operating capacity z (or
    demand for funds) at an effort cost.

13
Banks (2)
  • Bank effort cost function is given by
  • The transformation of effort into productive
    capacity is simply a standard production
    technology. The effort cost of setting up
    operating capacity z is

14
Competition
  • Agents who have chosen to be bankers can move at
    no cost to one of two unconnected locations,
    labeled M and C
  • Each bank in M acts as a monopolist and in C as a
    perfect competitive bank
  • there is free entry in the monopolistic and
    competitive banking sectors
  • project risks are independent across locations,
    but perfectly correlated within locations. Denote
    with and the risk choices
  • If an agent chooses to be a depositor, he will
    move to location C with probability
    (switching costs)

15
Deposit insurance
  • Deposit insurance (DI) is pre-funded by taxation
    of initial resources A
  • The tax revenues are invested in the safe
    technology that yields
  • Let denote the tax rate. The total
    end-of-period assets of the deposit insurance
    fund (DIF) are equal to
  • Denote with and total investment
    (deposits) and the guarantee per unit
    of deposits

16
Contracts and sequence of decisions
  • Depositors finance the bank with simple debt
    contracts that pay a fixed amount R per unit
    invested
  • Moral hazard is introduced by assuming that bank
    choices of P are not observable by depositors
  • Denote with x the fraction of bankers in C, with
    the measure of bankers, with the number
    of banks, with bank size (capacity), and
    with the deposit rates, for

17
Sequence of decisions and determined variables
18
Bank Problems
  • We solve backward, starting with the competitive
    and monopolistic bank problems
  • Competitive banks choose P to maximize

  • (1)
  • With solution

  • (2)

19
Competitive banks
  • Bertrand competition implies that maximizes
    depositors expected return

  • (3)
  • Then

20
Monopolistic banks
  • The representative monopolistic bank chooses
  • to maximize expected profits
  • (9)
  • subject to the depositors participation
    constraint

  • (10)

21
Monopolistic banks
  • where is given by

  • (11)
  • And

  • (14)

22
Monopolistic banks
  • The optimal risk choice of the monopolistic bank
    is thus

  • (15)
  • Using (14) and (15), the expected profits of the
    monopolistic bank are

  • (16)

23
Comparing bank optimal choices
24
Equilibrium (1)
25
Equilibrium (2)
26
Welfare
27
Social costs of bank failures
28
Conclusion
  • General equilibrium modeling of intermediation
    appear an essential tools to throw light on the
    desirable level of systemic risk in the economy,
    and how it could be attained
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