"Too big to fail" banks are "more dangerous than ever" to the
U.S. and world economies and must be reined in, the International
Monetary Fund chief said.
"The 'oversize banking' model of
too-big-to-fail is more dangerous than ever," Managing Director
Christine Lagarde told the Economic Club of New York ahead of the IMF's
spring meeting in Washington next week.
"We must get to the root
of the problem with comprehensive and clear regulation [and] more
intensive and intrusive supervision," she told the club, whose
membership is dedicated to promoting the study and discussion of social,
economic and political questions.
Too-big-to-fail banks are
considered so large and interconnected that they must be supported by
the government when they face difficulty because their failure would be
disastrous to the economy.
Bank of America Corp., Bank of New
York Mellon Corp., Citigroup Inc., Goldman Sachs Group Inc., JPMorgan
Chase & Co., Morgan Stanley, State Street Corp. and Wells Fargo
& Co. are the U.S. banks considered too big to fail by the Financial
Stability Board, a 4-year-old international body that monitors and
makes recommendations about the global financial system.
Seventeen other banks the stability board considers too big to fail are based in Europe and four are based in Asia.
Lagarde said regulators need "frameworks for orderly failure and
resolution" and she called for these frameworks to cross borders and to
be overseen by authorities who are truly empowered to exercise their
authority.
Her comments came more than a month after U.S.
Attorney General Eric Holder told the Senate Judiciary Committee the
Justice Department faced difficulties bringing criminal charges against
the financial giants when they're suspected of crimes because of fears
the banks' interconnectedness would endanger the national or global
economy.
"Some of these institutions have become too large,"
Holder told lawmakers March 6. "It has an inhibiting impact on our
ability to bring resolutions that I think would be more appropriate."
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas President Richard Fisher followed up
March 16, telling the Conservative Political Action Conference in
Washington the biggest financial institutions' assets should be limited
so the banks change from too big to fail to "small enough to save."
"The American people will be grateful to whoever liberates them from a
recurrence of taxpayer bailouts," Fisher told the conservative audience.
In her address Wednesday, Lagarde also criticized the U.S.
government's $85 billion in cuts, known as sequestration, which she said
could cut U.S. output 0.5 percent, risking "throwing away needed
growth, especially at a time when too many people are still out of
work."
"It is also an extremely blunt instrument, imposing deep
cuts in many vital programs -- including those that help the most
vulnerable -- while leaving untouched the key drivers of long-term
spending," said Lagarde, a former conservative French finance minister.
She said the world was now developing a "three-speed" global economy,
which she defined as "those countries that are doing well, those that
are on the mend and those that still have some distance to travel."
Emerging markets are doing well, the United States is on the mend and
the 17-country eurozone has some distance to travel, she said.
Each of the "speeds" needs to be careful to avoid a recurrence of the global financial crisis.
In the United States, "it is more important than ever to put in place a
credible, medium-term road map to bring down the debt -- a balanced
plan made up of savings in entitlement spending plus additional
revenues."
Right now, she said: "Adjustment is too aggressive in
the short term and too timid in the medium term. This adds to
uncertainty and casts a shadow on the recovery.
"We know the
future we want. We know the path to get there," Lagarde said. "The task
before us now is to act, to make that future a reality, to get ahead --
and stay ahead -- of the crisis."
Source:www.garp.org
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