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Deposit Insurance
Introduction
- Over recent decades financial-sector regulation has developed in
response to crises that called for effective failure resolution schemes.
Although the causes of many financial crises are broadly straightforward to
identify ex post, it is more complicated to construct effective
pre-positioning arrangements ex ante.
- A common failure resolution approach around the world is deposit
insurance. A World Bank survey on bank supervision in 2007 showed that about 70
percent of high-income countries and half of upper middle-income countries have
deposit insurance in place. The number of countries with deposit insurance or
policyholder compensation schemes has increased significantly in the past 25
years. In most cases, however, deposit insurance has been adopted as the result
of a financial crisis, as part of a broad financial-sector reform, or in
conformity with European Union (EU) requirements.
- The original driver for deposit insurance was to reduce the risk
of bank runs or contagion risk within the financial sector. However, many
legislators regard explicit depositor protection as a dominant reason for
deposit insurance.
- Among their developed country peers, New Zealand and Australia
are the only countries that do not have deposit insurance. In recent times, the
Australian Council of Financial Regulators has considered the potential
implementation of a deposit insurance scheme. This initiative followed from the
recent collapse of HIH and the International Monetary Fund’s Financial
Sector Assessment Programme in Australia in 2006. The Reserve Bank of New
Zealand (RBNZ) regularly reviews our policy stances, including on deposit
insurance, and will do so in the light of possible reforms in Australia and the
lessons from international events such as the Northern Rock experience in the
United Kingdom.
- This document discusses the RBNZ’s historical stance on the
case for deposit insurance, including an evaluation of the extent to which
deposit insurance could help the RBNZ meet the prudential policy objectives set
out in Section 68 of the Reserve Bank of New Zealand Act 1989.
To what extent could deposit insurance help the RBNZ meet the prudential
objectives?
- The prudential policy objectives set out in Section 68 of the
Reserve Bank of New Zealand Act are that our prudential powers are exercised for
the purposes of:
- Promoting the maintenance of a sound and efficient financial
system; or
- Avoiding significant damage to the financial system that could
result from the failure of a registered bank.
- Key issues in assessing whether or not a deposit insurance scheme
would help meet our prudential objectives are:
- Lower contagion risk and lower risk of a bank run
In general, deposit insurance can be expected to reduce the risk of
a retail bank run. However, in general, banks’ liquidity pressures will
also arise from wholesale funding, and a large proportion of New Zealand
banks’ short-term funding is via corporate and other wholesale deposits.
Deposit insurance will not apply to these sources of funding. For this reason,
it is not certain that New Zealand deposit-takers would face significantly lower
contagion risk, and lower risk of a bank run, as a result of deposit insurance.
Evidence from other countries suggests that deposit insurance schemes
tend not to be effective in preventing a retail bank run as they generally do
not provide for immediate and full payout of deposits. This means that
depositors still have an incentive to withdraw their funds in times of
heightened uncertainty about the bank’s ability to pay.
In addition
to the above, the RBNZ notes that deposit insurance does not address many of the
core failure-management issues such as access to transaction balances for all
creditors and the completion of pipeline transactions in the payment
systems.
- Depositor protection
Deposit insurance might
help promote depositor confidence, particularly in times of stress in the
financial system, although typically the degree of depositor protection is
limited as it applies only up to a predetermined level. On the other hand, the
existence of deposit insurance may reduce the political pressure to ‘bail
out’ a bank, could help take some of the political heat out of the
management of an insolvent deposit-taker, freeing up the manager to work towards
the best solution for the benefit of all relevant stakeholders .
- Sound risk management and governance practice in both
bank and non-bank deposit-taking institutions
Deposit insurance
could weaken market discipline and exacerbate moral hazard risks. For example, a
deposit insurance scheme could reduce the incentives for banks and other
deposit-takers to enhance their internal risk management and governance
practices. The more generous the scheme, the lower the incentives on depositors
to purchase deposit products on the basis of safety and soundness, with the
result that bank management will pay less attention to soundness issues and will
have relatively more incentives to attract depositors on the basis of price and
other factors.
- While deposit insurance can introduce additional risk to the
financial system, it is possible to reduce some of these risks through the
design of the deposit insurance scheme. The following section discusses
these risks, and how these risks can be mitigated.
- Weaker market discipline
Deposit insurance
can undermine market discipline in the financial system, and so reduce the
incentives for sound risk management within banks and non-bank deposit-takers.
On the other hand, a survivor-pays scheme could encourage deposit-takers to more
closely monitor and exert discipline on one another, as might a form of
co-insurance that exposes depositors to losses on a proportion of their insured
deposits. Getting the balance right so that it does not provide an incentive to
run on the bank is the challenge.
- Moral hazard risk
Deposit insurance can
exacerbate moral hazard risk by inducing more risk-taking by the insured
deposit-taking institutions. There are several things that can help lessen moral
hazard risk to some extent. Examples of these include effective supervisory
arrangements, prompt corrective action for emerging stress situations, an
ability to remove the senior management of a failed bank or non-bank
deposit-taker, a risk-based approach to pricing deposit insurance, and the
adoption of a low deposit insurance cap.
- Administration and compliance costs
A deposit
insurance scheme would incur administration and compliance costs. While the
costs in a financial system with relatively few banks could be expected to be
larger than in a system with many banks, these costs largely depend upon the
structure of the insurance scheme and the role of the insurer. In particular an
ex post funding scheme of a basic pay-box nature could be a
straightforward and low-cost option compared to an ex ante joint
funding scheme that might cause confusion around insurance cover and/or
payout.
- More intrusive prudential supervision
If the
RBNZ introduces deposit insurance in New Zealand, it may be necessary to ensure
that all insured institutions are subject to more intrusive prudential
supervision to manage the risks associated with the deposit insurance scheme
than otherwise. If insurance cover applies to banks and non-bank deposit-takers
(such as building societies, credit unions, and the finance companies that fund
via the retail debt markets), the deposit insurance scheme is likely to require
a more hands-on approach to supervision than would otherwise be the case.
- A cross-subsidy to higher-risk
deposit-takers
Deposit insurance will be perceived as a subsidy on
higher-risk banks and other deposit-takers, especially if the scheme charges a
fixed ex ante fee or if the surviving insured institutions fund the
scheme on an ex post basis. This potentially causes distortions in the
financial sector. A risk-based insurance fee can help level the playing field
for the insured entities, though it is very hard to calibrate in practice.
- Viability of a deposit insurance scheme in a small
financial system
It may be more difficult for deposit insurance
schemes to cover losses arising from a large bank failure in a small highly
concentrated financial system. Any shortfall might need to be shared between the
government or contributions from the surviving entities.
- The above issues are matters that the RBNZ had taken into account
in the past when it reached the view that deposit insurance was not appropriate
for New Zealand at the time.
That said, the RBNZ continues to monitor both
developments abroad and domestically, and the implications that these
developments may have for the case for deposit insurance in New
Zealand.