Integrating Micro and Macro Policy Levers in Response to Financial Crises

D. Crane, M. Kitzmuller, G. Miralles
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

The 2008–09 Global Financial Crisis originated from a poor incentive structure in the asset market derived from subprime mortgages. The ultimate bursting and unwinding of an asset bubble (here highly overvalued real estate prices woven into a complex multilayer network of securitization, so called collateralized debt obligations or CDOs) put enormous stress on the financial system, spreading through the global network economy and ultimately resulting in the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression. Economists today agree that the severe economic fallout can be largely attributed to the poor systemic performance of international financial markets. Global macroeconomic imbalances, as well as market failures such as excessive risk taking, misaligned incentives of rating agencies, inefficient liquidity provisions within banks and systemic risk or contagion, i.e., the international and inter-sectoral public goods nature of financial stability, were not sufficiently accounted for by regulation and international macroeconomic policy. This combined financial and economic crisis environment not only put the intrinsic connection between the financial and the real economy back into the spotlight, but also opened up a policy debate about how to ensure macroeconomic and financial stability without jeopardizing microeconomic foundations of the real economy such as competition. In sum, the resulting policy challenge is twofold: First, a new and sustainable balance between free markets, macro industrial policies, and governmental regulation needs to be found in the financial sector, and second, strategic interactions between macro and microeconomic policy goals need to be identified, understood, and balanced. This article will focus on the interaction between macroeconomic crisis management and prudential regulatory responses on the one hand, and competition policy and market structure on the other. We provide a simple economic framework for thinking about the relationship between macro and micro policies as a function of the immediate policy environment, i.e., “extraordinary” financial instability and imminent economic crisis versus “ordinary,” stable economic circumstances. Specifically, we claim that— during severe financial crises—the overall success of policy responses depends on the coordination of three related decisional vectors. First, policy makers must coordinate the responses of multiple regulatory and political actors. Second, they need to follow a systematic, rather than ad hoc, approach that diminishes moral hazard and leaves open a reasonable exit strategy. Finally, policy makers need to consider time consistency. In other words, they need to avoid the temptation to excessively discount post-crisis effects. Overall, this work shall add structure to the ongoing policy debate and provide conceptual guidance for lawyers and economists trying to address the challenges of micro and macro policy integration. In Part I, we provide an overview of the relationship between the financial and real economic sectors and between systemic financial stability and micro-competitive effects. In Part II, we advance our core theoretical proposition—the strategic complementarity of macro and micro policy levers during financial crises. In particular, we demonstrate that policy responses that fail to consider and balance the three key dimensions—coordination among decision-makers, a systematic approach, and time consistency—run the risk of harming both macro and micro-economic well-being in the long run. Finally, in Part III, we illustrate the quite different responses to the financial crisis of the European Union and the United States along the three key dimensions. Our goal is not to provide a comparative assessment of the two systems’ responses or a trans-Atlantic scorecard, but rather to illustrate the possibilities and challenges of coordinating macro and micro responses along the three key dimensions.
整合微观和宏观政策杠杆应对金融危机
2008-09年全球金融危机的根源在于次级抵押贷款衍生的资产市场激励结构不佳。资产泡沫的最终破裂和解除(这里被高度高估的房地产价格被编织成复杂的多层证券化网络,即所谓的债务抵押债券或cdo)给金融体系带来了巨大的压力,蔓延到全球网络经济,最终导致了自大萧条以来最严重的经济危机。今天,经济学家一致认为,严重的经济后果在很大程度上可归因于国际金融市场的系统性表现不佳。监管和国际宏观经济政策没有充分考虑到全球宏观经济失衡以及市场失灵,如过度冒险、评级机构的激励措施不一致、银行内部流动性供应效率低下以及系统性风险或传染,即金融稳定的国际和部门间公共产品性质。在这种金融和经济危机并存的环境下,金融和实体经济之间的内在联系再次成为人们关注的焦点,同时也引发了一场关于如何在不损害竞争等实体经济微观经济基础的情况下确保宏观经济和金融稳定的政策辩论。总之,由此产生的政策挑战是双重的:首先,需要在金融部门找到自由市场、宏观产业政策和政府监管之间新的可持续平衡;其次,需要确定、理解和平衡宏观和微观经济政策目标之间的战略互动。本文将重点讨论宏观经济危机管理和审慎监管反应之间的相互作用,以及竞争政策和市场结构之间的相互作用。我们提供了一个简单的经济框架来思考宏观和微观政策之间的关系,作为当前政策环境的函数,即“非常”金融不稳定和迫在眉睫的经济危机与“普通”稳定的经济环境。具体而言,我们认为,在严重的金融危机期间,政策应对的总体成功取决于三个相关决策向量的协调。首先,政策制定者必须协调多个监管和政治参与者的反应。其次,它们需要遵循一种系统性的、而非临时性的方法,以降低道德风险,并为合理的退出策略留有余地。最后,政策制定者需要考虑时间一致性。换句话说,他们需要避免过度低估危机后影响的诱惑。总的来说,这项工作将为正在进行的政策辩论增添结构,并为试图解决微观和宏观政策整合挑战的律师和经济学家提供概念指导。在第一部分中,我们概述了金融和实体经济部门之间的关系,以及系统金融稳定和微观竞争效应之间的关系。在第二部分,我们提出了我们的核心理论命题——金融危机中宏观和微观政策杠杆的战略互补性。特别是,我们证明,未能考虑和平衡决策者之间的协调、系统方法和时间一致性这三个关键维度的政策反应,从长远来看有损害宏观和微观经济福祉的风险。最后,在第三部分中,我们将从三个关键方面说明对欧盟和美国金融危机的截然不同的反应。我们的目标不是提供两个系统反应的比较评估或跨大西洋记分卡,而是说明沿三个关键维度协调宏观和微观反应的可能性和挑战。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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