Saturday 19 February 2011

Why depositors are powerless and why bank bail outs make things worse.

Two related issues came up at post-film discussion yesterday where people's thinking appears to be a bit confused, so for the benefit of anybody who's interested:
---------------------
1. There is a theory that if a lot of depositors ganged up and all withdrew their money from a bank on a particular day, then if more than ten per cent of deposits were withdrawn, they could bring the bank to its knees (in which case depositors would demand, what? Higher interest rates on their savings?), see e.g. Cantona's Cashpoint Revolution.

Most people ignored Cantona, but what if they hadn't? Well, it would have been a good old fashioned bank run like on Northern Rock, and the government would have just stepped in and lent the bank(s) the spare cash.

Remember that people would have to withdraw their savings in cash (merely taking it from one bank account and putting it in another achieves very little), and a bank note is just an interest free loan that you are making to the government (it is your financial asset and the government's financial liability).

Therefore the government can easily provide loans to banks which are equal to the cash withdrawn. Before the depositors' strike we have this position:

Banks -> owe £ billions to - > people with cash in the bank

And afterwards, we end up with the following:

Banks -> owe £ billions to -> government -> owes £ billions to -> people with 'cash under the mattress'.

If people are too worried about being burgled, they will put their saving in the safest place possible, i.e. the government-run National Savings & Investments, which makes the picture even clearer.
----------------------
2. Why don't savers demand higher interest rates? Well, they do, I suppose, but the banks aren't offering them and that is the end of that. It is a cartel which has most successfully managed to widen its profit margins after the downturn, because the banks know (or have good reason to believe) that if they can't get enough money from savers or bond investors, they can borrow it cheaply from the government (and they have done, in spades).

I mean, why would a retailer bother paying a supplier £100 per unit if the government were offering them for £50 each?
----------------------
3. As I tried explaining before, the politicians claim that they are bailing out the banks to 'protect savers' money' which is hokum, of course.

The analogy I used was a bit left field, so let's assume that Farepak is a bank and they have managed to lose four-fifths of their savers' money, or £400 per saver.

Now, let's assume that the government had previously enacted a law saying that Xmas club savings accounts were guaranteed by the government/taxpayer, and Farepak went *pop*. Does it make more sense for the government to:

a) Give the savers directly the £400 they lost (or whatever higher or lower amount an individual saver lost) and have done with it (chasing Farepak and its directors for any shortfall), or

b) Give or lend all that money to Farepak on the condition that they fulfil their pledges and promise to play nicely in future?

I'd submit that (a) makes more sense but in most cases, governments around the world have chosen (b). Very few governments allowed banks to collapse and agreed to pay some compensation to savers (method (a), which worked a treat for Iceland) and other countries who are a bit more clued up (and not in cahoots with bankers) have asked their banks to sort themselves out via debt-for-equity swaps (Denmark, and rather bizarrely, Northern Rock in the UK after three years' wrangling), but these examples are few and far between.

Obviously, the government doesn't guarantee your money if it's with a Xmas club and you might not agree with the law guaranteeing your money up to £85,000 if it's in a bank, that's a separate issue.
---------------------
4. So there we have it. There is precious little we can do because the government will thwart us at every turn, using our money to do so.

And the underlying reason why 'they' have us by the short and curlies is because they know and we know that the only way to keep house prices at double their true value is by continually pumping in money via the banking system, so while we curse and swear at bankers and their bonuses, this is about as much use as Catholics complaining about priests abusing children.

Until we abandon this thinking that high house prices make us richer, there will always be bankers and politicians ready to exploit this for personal gain, and as long as there are Catholics who believe in their church as an institution, there will be people who abuse that trust, end of.

18 comments:

chefdave said...

Nicely explained. Bank runs don't pose the threat they used to because our currency is no longer gold backed, so if savers want all their gov't paper instantly Merv can just fire up the printing press. I don't advocate the Gold Standard, obviously, but it does allow savers to harness their collective power if they suspect the state and their bankers are taking the piss. That is until the gov't bans personal gold holdings!

The banking system is far too big and poses an unnecessary risk because it reflects the capitalised value of British land rents. Taxing away that value deals with the core problem, but the British public won't accept it because it prevents them from playing monopoly.

We're in desperate need of a paradigm shift, it'll stop 99% of professional economists and politicians from talking bollocks.

Bayard said...

"Denmark, and rather bizarrely, Northern Rock in the UK after three years' wrangling"

I suspect that NR, being a brash, northern Johnny-come-lately, isn't in the same club as the likes of Lloyds or Barclays, so they don't get a nice, comfortable, state-subsidised existence.

Mark Wadsworth said...

CD: "The banking system is far too big and poses an unnecessary risk because it reflects the capitalised value of British land rents."

That is the best one-sentence summary ever. Duly noted.

Mark Wadsworth said...

B, I doubt whether the North-South thing made much difference:

1. NR were quite close to Labour Party and so initially treated with kid gloves, and it was the Labour government which ended up splitting it and doing a debt-for-equity swap by default.

2. Halifax is 'Northern' and got bundled in with Lloyds.

3. RBS is about as far north as you can get.

Anonymous said...

Thanks Mark,

Agree with what you have said, I am trapped.
Is there one line of resistance though: The 'Buy Silver Crash....movement'? I guess not....
My understanding is that in the 1930s USA, you were not able to open a safe deposit box without an IRS official present.
The last stand?
I picture a situation where the government implements the above, but also requires that they are able to metal detect all UK land. Thus, the 1960s BBC license vans with no real technology on board, will be replaced buy gold and silver detectors, buzzing up and down 'leafy streets' that really can sniff out metals at a hundred yards and six feet under!

Mike W

Mark Wadsworth said...

Mike W, that still achieves nothing because we'd jsut hand over the bank notes to the people selling silver. We'd then merely shift to a position where:

banks -> owe £ billions to -> government -> owes £ billions to -> the people who just sold all the silver.

PS, the total value of all the silver is nowhere near £1,000 billion which UK savers have on deposit so it fails on the practicality, let alone the principle. Sure, the demand would push up the price fantastically, but I'd rather lend my money to the government than vastly overpay for some silver and make huge losses in future.

Bayard said...

Mark,

2. The Halifax/Bank of Scotland merger had happened years before and

3. Scotland doesn't count as "northern" - "northern" means northern English.

Anyway, I think it was more their recentness as a bank that would count against them.

Mark Wadsworth said...

B, yes of course, don't take it so seriously.

PS, Halifax/Leeds PBS was distinctly northern (whether or not we include BoS as northern) - and Mr G Brown had no qualms about foisting them off onto Lloyds-TSB-C&G which was distinctly southern.

As others have pointed out, there was a difference between how 'new' banks (i.e. demutualised BSs like Halifax, Abbey, NR, B&B etc) behaved during the bubble (they were stupider than the 'old' banks) and how they were treated afterwards. But if they were treated more harshly, then you could say 'it serves them right'.

formertory said...

The banking system is far too big and poses an unnecessary risk because it reflects the capitalised value of British land rents. Taxing away that value deals with the core problem

OK, I volunteer to be Mr Stupid for the day (again, as my dear wife would say). In that capacity I ask on behalf of both me and all those others who didn't quite grok this point if CD or MW (or anyone else who feels up to the task) might explain it in bite-size chunks.

You might have noticed I'm not an economist......... :o)

Mark Wadsworth said...

FT, let's say a house costs £100 and the rent is £5 a year.

You can say a house is worth £100 and the annualised value of the house is £5, or you can say the rent for a house is £5 and capitalised value of the rent is £100.

Banks like house price bubbles, and they are working towards a position where everybody has a 100% interest only mortgage, so the size of the banks would be equal to the total value of all land and buildings.

That's all, really.

formertory said...

they are working towards a position where everybody has a 100% interest only mortgage

I wondered what'd happened to the current value of {property-not-borrowed-against}. Thanks for the explanation.

Anonymous said...

Mark,

I should be more careful. I was thinking about what C/Dave and you were debating.The gold silver thing is not something I am pushing as financial advice, I am aware of the debate from HPC.

As it happens though, friends of mine back in the 1970s were bricking 'imported' Krugerrand's into their semis! So my attempted 'humour' was thinking back to those times.

F, I value Wadsworth too, exactly because he comes back to his critics with a 'balance sheet account' if necessary.

MikeW

DBC Reed said...

If (or more likely,when)we get some more bank runs ,it would be easier for the Guv to just nationalise all the banks,saves a lot of bovver.Then the Guv could just create the credit the way the banks do now and charge interest in a way which would serve as a whacking great tax (which interest is at the moment only privately collected.) In Classical Reed-onomics (sic) this is pretty necessary because the complementary Land Value Tax would be the JS Mill version (which Henry George obviously plagiarised and mucked about)and ,as this only taxes land values when they go up,could hardly collect anything at all ,if the depraved British public got the message and stopped piling into land.

Mark Wadsworth said...

DBC, what's the point in nationalising them? They can sort themselves out AFAIAC.

DBC Reed said...

MW
It should be possible to make a lot of money out of them in interest,that's the point.Why should n't this source of unearned income be taxed for the nation? Instead of,or, as well as, land values?Taxing land values is bloody tricky: some poor sod is going to pay a fortune for the land under his house in mortgage repayments AND the annual rental value of the land in tax to the State.Not ideal.Whereas the Mill tax would just be a tax on current land value inflation (which would come skidding to a halt once people got the hang of it).
A tax on annual rental value would tax past periods of inflationary uplift most probably garnered by the bloke who sold you the house five years ago which he used to scarper to Spain with the girl from the off-licence.
All the replacement value of other taxes adduced for LVT applies in spades to State owned credit creation.

Mark Wadsworth said...

DBC, I have thought this through.

In my income tax, VAT-free world, the main tax would be LVT (remembering that the bulk of this would be dished out again as CI, so slightly more than half of households would pay net no tax at all) and there'd also be a flat tax on total bank assets of about 2% or 3% to encourage banks to concentrate on lending which gives the highest margins, rather than just lending as much as possible on inflated land values.

"A tax on annual rental value would tax past periods of inflationary uplift most probably garnered by the bloke who sold you the house five years ago which he used to scarper to Spain with the girl from the off-licence."

That's a "Killer Argument Against Land Value Tax, Not"! By and large, people would pay no more (or hopefully less) in LVT than they currently do in income tax, NI, VAT, Council Tax, TV licence etc etc.

Mark Wadsworth said...

DBC, of course my bank asset tax would raise about £40 or £50 bn a year, which is much the same as all the taxes they currently pay which they would no longer be paying (PAYE, corporation tax, Stamp Duty, irrecoverable VAT and so on).

Bayard said...

"If (or more likely,when)we get some more bank runs ,it would be easier for the Guv to just nationalise all the banks,saves a lot of bovver"

Come to think of it, that's another piece of evidence that the country is run by the bankers: when the post-war gov't was nationalising everything in sight, it didn't nationalise the banks. (OK, it nationalised the Bank of England, but that was pretty well nationalised anyway before that.)