WPS6721 Policy Research Working Paper 6721 Macro Prudential Policies from a Micro Prudential Angle Tito Cordella Samuel Pienknagura The World Bank Development Economics Vice Presidency Operations and Strategy Unit & Latin America and the Caribbean Region Office of the Chief Economist December 2013 Policy Research Working Paper 6721 Abstract The standard macro(prudential) models focus on shows that different prudential instruments affect banks’ externalities and treat all prudential instruments as risk-taking incentives differently. Thus, conflicts may arise alternative, but equivalent, forms of Pigouvian taxes. This between the micro and macro prudential stance. paper explicitly models individual banks’ risk choices and This paper is a product of the Operations and Strategy Unit, Development Economics Vice Presidency; and the Office of the Chief Economist, Latin America and the Caribbean Region. 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They do not necessarily represent the views of the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development/World Bank and its affiliated organizations, or those of the Executive Directors of the World Bank or the governments they represent. Produced by the Research Support Team Macro Prudential Policies from a Micro Prudential Angle Tito Cordellayand Samuel Pienknaguraz JEL Classi…cation: G21, G28. Keywords: Macroprudential Regulation, Microprudential Regulation, Bank Risk Taking. We thank Pierluigi Bologna, Giovanni Dell’Ariccia, Augusto de la Torre, Jose Luis Diaz Sanchez, Alain Ize, Carlos Vegh and participants at the Conference at the Central Bank of Turkey and CEMLA (Mexico City) for helpful comments and suggestions. The usual disclaimers apply. y The World Bank, 1818 H St. NW, Washington, DC 20433, USA; E-Mail:tcordella@worldbank.org. z The World Bank, 1818 H St. NW, Washington, DC 20433, USA; E-Mail:spienknagura@worldbank.org. 1 Introduction The active use of prudential instruments to control credit volumes and allocations fell into disgrace in the 1990s, when the regulatory pendulum swung toward …nancial liberalization.1 Then, in 2008, the global …nancial crisis hit …nancially developed economies hard and exposed the limits of the existing prudential framework in dealing with systemic risk. This swung the pendulum back, and the active use of prudential instruments such as reserve requirements, loan-to-value ratios, taxes on credit, and capital requirements to smooth the credit cycle and avert major crises (macroprudential policies, according to the current jargon) gained momentum. The global …nancial crisis also uncov- ered the dangerous liaisons between micro and macro stability and forced macroeconomists to give a serious look at the interaction between business cycles and …nancial frictions.2 The latter started being incorporated in standard DSGE models and with them the rationale for macroprudential policies became evident.3 However, in (necessarily) stylized DSGE models, taxes on debt, capital, and liquidity require- ments end up being equivalent forms of Pigouvian taxation that can e¤ectively deal with the negative overborrowing externalities.4 This raises the question of how robust such results are– that is whether in a more micro-founded model such equivalence results still hold. This is the question we address in this paper. Using a very stylized model where a bank maximizes pro…ts choosing lending rates and the riskiness of its portfolio, we show that, from a microprudential perspective, the choice of macroprudential instruments does indeed matter. It is true that capital requirements, liquidity requirements and taxes on debt all have an adverse e¤ect on banks’ incentives to lend, which means that all these instruments successfully address overborrowing externalities. However, while capital requirements, by increasing the banks’skin in the game, make banks more prudent, liquidity requirements and taxes on debt make banks engage in riskier behavior. There are a number of studies discussing the purposes of macroprudential regulation in dealing with di¤erent kind of externalities, and a growing one looking at the e¤ectiveness of macroprudential measures in smoothing the business cycle; Galati and Moessner (2011) and Hanson et. al. (2011) are excellent surveys. However, little is still known about how the choice of di¤erent prudential instruments a¤ects the incentives of the single institutions to take on risk. This paper is an attempt to …ll such a gap. The model we present is similar to Dell’ Ariccia et al. (forthcoming) who study the interaction between monetary policy and the capital structure of the bank. The questions we raise in this paper are similar to those in De Nicolò et al. (2012) who study how, in the presence of credit and liquidity risk, capital and liquidity requirements a¤ect a bank’ s risk-taking incentives in a calibrated dynamic 1 This regulatory view was supported by macroeconomic models built in a Modigliani-Miller world where the absence of …nancial frictions made regulation and supervision unnecessary. Even when macro models such as Bernanke and Gertler (1996) and Kiyotaki and Moore (1997) highlighted the possibility that simple agency problems could lead to potentially dangerous credit cycles, the idea of using prudential instruments to smooth business cycle ‡ uctuations was considered as passé. Given such a background, it is not surprising that prudential regulation was generally analyzed in micro-models (as the one surveyed in Freixas and Rochet, 2008) and its macro impact generally overseen. 2 Usually in the form of collateral contraints that create externality problems that lead to episodes of overborrowing and subsequent Fisherian de‡ ation. 3 Macroprudential policies force agents to internalize the external cost of borrowing making the economy less vulnerable to …nancial crises. This is the argument for Pigouvian taxes in Jeanne and Korinek (2010), and Bianchi (2011). 4 Bianchi (2011) formally proves the equivalence between these di¤erent instruments. 2 model. Calomiris et al. (2012) discuss the relative e¤ectiveness of capital and cash requirements and, di¤erently from our paper, they …nd that reserve requirements may be an e¤ective tool to decrease default risk. However, the channel they emphasize is the decrease in leverage, which, in our model, can only be achieved through tougher capital requirements. 2 The Model 2.1 s Problem The Bank’ We focus our analysis on a (representative) monopolistic competitive bank facing a downward sloped demand curve for loans L, L = (A R), with R denoting the interest rate o¤ered by the bank. Notice that A can be thought of as a measure of the strength/quality of the demand for credit, and as an inverse measure of the bank’ s market power. In addition to the lending rate, the bank also chooses the riskiness of its portfolio. Here, we model the choice of risk as the choice of a level of monitoring e¤ort q , q 2 [0; 1], exerted by the bank, which also represents the probability 2 that the loan is repaid; we further assume that the cost of monitoring is c(q ) = cq2 per dollar lent. Monitoring costs are borne by the bank before returns are realized. Monitoring can be literally thought of as a non pecuniary cost associated with screening e¤orts; however, we prefer to interpret our set-up more broadly, and think of it as a reduced form of a model in which the bank chooses among portfolios with di¤erent risk returns pro…les.5 As per the source of funding, theoretically, banks can choose between demand deposits and capital. However, since we assume that (i) deposits are fully insured and are supplied inelastically at an interest rate r, and (ii) the cost of raising capital is r + > r, in the absence of capital requirements, the bank will rely exclusively on the (cheaper) demand deposits. The problem of the bank can thus be written as: cq 2 M ax = q (R r) (A R): q 2[0;1];R2[r;A= ] 2 The necessary and su¢ cient …rst-order conditions for a maximum are: @ = (A R) (R r cq ) = 0; (1) @q @ cq 2 = Aq 2 qR + qr + = 0; (2) @R 2 so that6 2(A r ) q = ; (3) 3c 2A + r R = : (4) 3 5 As in Blum (1999), or Cordella and Levy Yeyati (2003). 6 To avoid boring the reader with tedious assumptions, througout the paper we implicitly assume that the para- meters are such that the optimal monitoring e¤ort and interest rate correspond to an interior solution to the bank’s maximization problem– q 2 (0; 1) and R 2 (r; A= ): 3 Not surprisingly, monitoring e¤ort depends positively on the strength of the demand (and on the bank’ s market power) and negatively on its costs (both monitoring and funding costs). Having worked out the simplest model in which a bank strategically chooses risk and interest rates, the next step is to introduce in the model some of the most popular macroprudential instruments discussed in the literature and see how they may a¤ect the bank’ s behavior. Notice that the analysis of this paper is purely positive. Our interest is that of highlighting some of the possible trade-o¤s that may arise between micro and macro prudential objectives without modelling the overborrowing externalities (that call for macroprudential policies in the …rst place) and thus without explicitly solving for the optimal policy. This is why we decided to focus on a representative monopolistic competitive bank. In other words, we assume that the macroprudential regulator might want to smooth the credit cycle because of the negative externalities associated with lending booms and busts (which we do not model) and we ask how the di¤erent instruments it uses a¤ect the risk-taking incentives of a representative bank (which we do model). In addition, we also abstract from other (good) prudential reasons why reserve requirements (or other measures targeting the banks’liability structure, such as the net stable funding ratio introduced in Basel III) may be put in place. 2.2 Prudential Regulation We now look at three macroprudential measures that have received particular attention in the recent literature: a tax t on deposits (which is equivalent to the presence of unremunerated or partially remunerated reserve requirements), a tax on loans levied on borrowers,7 and a minimum capital requirement set equal to a fraction 2 [0; 1] of total lending. Under this regulatory framework, the bank’ s expected total cost of funding per unit of loans, C (:), can be written as C ( ; ; t; r) = q (1 )(r + t) + (r + ); where is the wedge between the cost of capital and the interest rate. For the sake of simplicity, in the remainder of the analysis, we assume that capital requirements are always binding, that is t < : This assumption is equivalent to imposing an upper bound on the tax on deposits, or on the level of unremunerated reserve requirements. The bank’ s problem can now be written as: cq 2 M ax i = q (R ) (r + ) (A ( + )R); (5) q 2[0;1];R2[r;A= ] 2 with (1 )(r + t): The equilibrium is now fully characterized by the …rst-order conditions: @ = (A (R + ))((R ) cq ) = 0; (6) @q @ c 2 = q (R ) (r + ) q + q (A (R + )) = 0; (7) @R 2 7 Notice that although the tax on loans is assumed to be paid by borrowers, the bank’s problem will be a¤ected through the demand for loans that now becomes A ( + R). 4 which yield 0 s 1 2 1 @A A q = ( + )+ ( + ) + 6c (r + )A ; (8) 3c 0 s 1 2 1 @A A R = +2 + ( + ) + 6c (r + )A : (9) 3 Expressions (8) and (9) provide the equilibrium levels of risk and interest rates (and thus lending volumes) as a function of the parameters of the model. Di¤erentiating (8), and (9) with respect to , t; and , it is straightforward to verify that @q @q @q @ > 0; @t < 0; @ < 0; and 8 @L < 0; @R < 0; @ @t @R @ < 0 : We thus have that: Result 1 A tightening of macroprudential regulation (through an increase in either minimum cap- ital requirements, reserve requirements, or taxes on credit) leads to a reduction in credit volumes. However, while an increase in capital requirements decreases the riskiness of the bank’ s loan port- folio, an increase in reserve requirements or taxes on credit increases it. The result suggests that, when incentives are taken into account, the equivalence between di¤erent macroprudential tools is broken. In particular, an increase in the bank’ s external cost of funds, triggered, for instance, by an increase in reserve requirements, increases individual banks’ risk-taking incentives.9 The reason is that an increase in the cost of the bank’s external liabilities, such as obligations to depositors, only matters if the bank does not fail. This tends to exacerbate moral hazard, and to induce the bank to behave in a less prudent way. Similarly, as long as the demand for loans is not completely inelastic, the introduction of a tax on credit reduces the bank’ s returns in the case of success and so its incentive to monitor. On the contrary, the introduction of capital requirements, by increasing the bank’ s skin in the game, makes it more liable and decreases risk-taking incentives. Finally, comparing the e¤ects of reserve requirements and taxes, it is easy to verify that, in the absence of minimum capital requirements, taxes on deposits and taxes on credit are equivalent. In the presence of capital requirements, instead, an increase in the tax on credit will a¤ect credit (negatively) and risk taking (positively) more than a tax on deposits. This follows from the fact that the presence of capital requirements reduces the deposit tax base. 3 Conclusions According to the current wisdom, prudential regulation should be thought of as an additional in- strument in the hands of policymakers to avoid the build up of excessive risk along the business cycle. Such a view is supported by many recent contributions that incorporate …nancial ampli…ca- tion e¤ects in open macro models, and study how ‘ macroprudential’taxes can help in coping with …nancial externalities.10 8 @L Remembering that @R = . 9 According to Aldo Mendes, the Brazil Central Bank’ s a central bank director responsible for monetary pol- icy.“Lowering reserve requirements helps …nancial stability,” Bloomberg, September 20, 2012. 10 See, among others, Bianchi et al. (2012), Korinek, (2011), and Benigno et. al. (2011) 5 In this paper, we show that while di¤erent prudential instruments may help reduce lending incentives, their e¤ect on banks’ risk-taking incentives are uneven. While capital requirements always promote safer behavior, the same is not true for liquidity requirements and, in general, for those kind of instruments that are equivalent to a tax on banks’ liabilities. This means that if it is important to look at the macro e¤ects of microprudential measures, one should also look at the micro e¤ect of macroprudential policies. Policies that aim at reducing risk associated with …nancial externalities may under certain circumstances increase banks’risk appetite so that micro and macro prudential objectives may not always go hand in hand. 6 References [1] Benigno G., H. Chen, C. Otrok, A. Rebucci and E. 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