speeches · May 9, 2010
Regional President Speech
Narayana Kocherlakota · President
Taxing Risk*
Narayana Kocherlakota
President
Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis
Economic Club of Minnesota
Minneapolis, Minnesota
May 10, 2010
*This topic is discussed in greater depth in "Taxing Risk and the Optimal Regulation of Financial Institutions,"
Economic Policy Paper 10-3 (May 2010), Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis.
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In the mid-2000s, we—as investors, home buyers, and bank lenders—collectively bet that house
prices would not fall by 30 percent in most major metropolitan areas in three years. We were wrong.
This mismatch between our expectations and our realizations was the ultimate source of the financial
crisis of 2007-09.
The Congress of the United States is currently considering legislation to restructure financial
regulation. However, no matter how well-written or how well-intentioned the legislation may be, no law
can completely eliminate the kinds of collective investor and regulator mistakes that lead to financial
crises. These mistakes have taken place periodically for centuries. They will certainly do so again. And
once these crises happen, there are strong economic forces that lead policymakers—for the best of
reasons—to bail out financial firms. In other words, no legislation can completely eliminate bailouts. Any
new financial regulatory structure must keep this reality in mind.
My theme today is that, although bailouts are inevitable, their magnitude can be limited by
taxes on financial institutions. I arrive at this conclusion about the usefulness of taxes by thinking
through an analogy that I’ll develop at some length. I will argue that, knowing bailouts are inevitable,
financial institutions fail to internalize all the risks that their investment decisions impose on society.
Economists would say that bailouts thereby create a risk “externality.” There is nearly a century of
economic thought about how to deal with externalities of various sorts—and the usual answer is
through taxation. I will suggest that the logic that argues for taxation to deal with other externalities is
exactly applicable in this case as well. As always, any views I share today are my own, and not
necessarily those of others in the Federal Reserve System.
My case for taxing banks is distinct from one often heard in popular discourse. This latter logic
usually runs: Taxpayers put X dollars into the banking sector, and the banking sector should repay all of
that money. This argument is, I think, fundamentally grounded in a desire for revenge: Some big banks—
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perhaps now gone forever—took our money, and so all big banks must pay. Taxes are seen as
punishment—a means of exacting retribution from the guilty (them) to compensate the innocent (us).
My story is different. At least some big banks did make socially undesirable choices. But — in
large part—they were led to make those choices by incentives within the tax and regulatory system.
Parts of these incentives were shaped by the ultimately correct expectation that some bailouts would
take place in the event of a financial crisis. These government guarantees—no matter how implicit they
might have been—created an incentive for financial institutions to make socially undesirable choices.
Taxation is a useful way to correct this incentive.
Earlier, I claimed that bailouts of financial institutions are certain to occur in financial crises.
Why do I say this? There are many forces at play, but I believe that the strongest has to do with the very
nature of financial intermediation. Investors in financial institutions always want the ability to pull out
their funds quickly. For this reason, financial institutions’ liabilities often take the form of short-term
debt and deposits. But such short-term financing instruments are intrinsically prone to self-fulfilling
crises of confidence that economists term “runs.”
Imagine that Bank X needs $100 billion of one-day loans to survive. This means that for a given
lender to be willing to make a $1-billion, one-day loan to Bank X, that lender has to believe that Bank X
will get another $99 billion in one-day loans. Then, Bank X may fail simply because every possible lender
believes correctly that no lender is willing to lend to Bank X. Such a crisis of confidence can occur
regardless of the true condition of Bank X.
This story is hardly a new one. It’s exactly why we have deposit insurance: to prevent runs by
reassuring bank depositors that their money is safe. But the story has huge consequences for how
governments operate. In a financial crisis, there is a tremendous sense of uncertainty. There are some
truly insolvent financial firms out there—but no one knows for sure which ones they are. And during a
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crisis, the panic in the air means that any institution—even one with solid fundamentals—may be
subjected to a run if its investors lose confidence in its solvency.
In such an atmosphere, contagion effects become extremely powerful. Even a slight loss by one
short-term creditor can lead all short-term lenders to rush to the safety of Treasury bills. Such flight
would endanger the survival of key financial institutions, even if they are fundamentally sound.
Governments cannot risk such systemic collapse, and so during times of crisis, they end up providing
debt guarantees for all financial institutions. Thus, policymakers inevitably resort to bailouts even when
they have explicitly resolved, in the strongest possible terms, to let firms fail.
Many observers of the events of September 2008 have emphasized the need for better
resolution mechanisms. Different people mean different things by this, but most want to impose losses
on debt holders. I’m not opposed to faster resolutions of bankruptcies. But I do not believe that better
resolution mechanisms will end bailouts. Indeed, I’m led to make a prediction. No matter what
mechanisms we legislate now to impose losses on creditors, Congress, or some agency acting on
Congress’ behalf, will block them when we next face a financial crisis. And Congress will do so for a very
good reason: to forestall a run on the key players in the financial system.
So, that’s my first point: Bailouts are inevitable. Let me move to my next point: Bailouts create
inefficiencies in the allocation of real investment. Here’s what I mean. Financial institutions make
investments that are, by their very nature, risky—that is, their returns are not certain. They finance
these investments, at least in part, using debt and deposits.
Now, imagine for a moment that we live in a world without bailouts, so that the government
does not provide debt guarantees or deposit insurance. If a financial institution decided to increase the
risk level of its investment portfolio, its debt holders and depositors would face a greater risk of loss. By
way of compensation for that greater risk, they’d demand a higher yield. As a result, in the absence of
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government guarantees, financial institutions would find it more costly to obtain debt financing for
highly risky investments than for less risky ones. This effect, on the margin, would curb a firm’s appetite
for risk. It would have an especially powerful effect on highly leveraged financial institutions, because
high debt-to-asset levels mean higher risk of being unable to fulfill debt obligations.
But now return to the real world, with deposit insurance and debt guarantees, and the
inevitability of government bailouts. Even if they only kick in during financial crises, these guarantees
change this natural market relationship between risk and cost. The depositors and debt holders are now
partially insulated from increases in investment risk, and so do not demand a sufficiently high yield from
riskier firms. Financial institutions take on too much risk, because they are no longer deterred from
doing so by the high costs of debt finance. And this missing deterrence is especially relevant for firms
that are highly leveraged, because they should be paying out especially high yields on their debts.
In this way, the expectation of bailouts leads to too much capital being allocated toward overly
risky ventures. These misallocations of capital don’t create the collective mistakes in predictions that
generate financial crises. But the misallocations do mean that society loses a lot from those mistakes—a
lot more than is efficient.
What kind of policy would be useful in correcting this inefficiency? In what follows, I will offer an
analogy from a completely different arena of public policy that can help us think through this key
question.
Consider a factory that creates air pollution as a byproduct of operation. When the firm that
owns the factory chooses to produce more output, it incurs various private costs: more raw materials,
more labor, and so on. But the production increase also generates more pollution that will be absorbed
by the surrounding community. The pollution is a social cost of production not paid for, or
“internalized,” by the firm that generates it. Economists refer to such costs as “externalities.”
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This same distinction between private and social costs applies to financial institutions that are
facing debt guarantees. Such guarantees imply that some portion of the risk produced by a firm’s
investment decisions is absorbed by taxpayers. In making decisions about what to invest in, the firm
ignores that portion of risk. It is a social cost of the project that the private firm does not internalize. Just
like the pollution, the risk borne by taxpayers is an externality—what I will call a “risk externality.”
This analogy is useful because economists know a lot about how to deal with externalities. We
can exploit their years of research to address the problem of financial regulation when government
bailouts are inevitable. In particular, that long history of thought says that the best way to correct
externalities is by providing the right kinds of incentives through appropriate taxes.
Let me be more specific. Again, let’s think about the firm with a polluting factory. Many of its
choices affect the amount of pollution produced, including the amount of time that the firm runs the
factory during the workweek, the sorts of antipollution technology employed, and the kind of energy
used to run the factory. Now, the government could regulate the firm’s pollution levels by controlling
each and every one of these choices. However, to do so, the government has to choose how to trade off
these three (and other) factors against one another.
Its trade-off decisions will be influenced by both pollution considerations and cost factors. If
antipollution technology is cheap, the government may simply require the firm to invest in that. But if
antipollution technology is expensive, the government may require the firm to switch to using natural
gas instead of coal. Making these trade-offs requires a tremendous amount of firm-specific information
and firm-specific cost minimization. To put it mildly, historical evidence suggests that governments are
not very good at such micromanagement of factory-level operation; that’s why we have private markets.
The solution to this difficulty is to regulate the amount of pollution produced by the firm, rather
than how the firm produces that pollution. The central problem here is that pollution has a social cost
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that the firm does not internalize when choosing its level of production. From society’s point of view,
the firm will overproduce pollution. However, the firm will choose the socially efficient level of pollution
if it is required to pay for—or internalize—the social cost of the pollution.
More concretely, suppose that the firm is told, before choosing its level of production, that the
government will measure the amount of pollution that the firm generates and charge the firm a tax that
is exactly equal to the social cost of that quantity of pollution. This policy generates a tax schedule that
translates the amount of pollution generated into an amount paid by the firm. If the firm knows that it
faces this tax schedule, its costs of production will include the social cost of pollution, along with labor,
materials, energy, and the like. In this way, what was external to the firm becomes internal. As a result,
the firm will choose the socially efficient level of production. Just as importantly, it will automatically
choose to produce that pollution—and its other more beneficial outputs—in a cost-minimizing fashion.
The government does not need to solve the firm’s cost-minimization problem.
These lessons about pollution regulation translate directly into lessons about financial
regulation. As in the pollution case, a financial institution should be taxed for the amount of risk it
produces that is borne by taxpayers. The firm will then choose the socially optimal level of risk.
Here’s my preferred policy. The firm is told that the government will estimate the expected,
discounted value of bailouts that the financial institution (or any of its stakeholders) will receive in the
future. I say “expected” because the amount of the bailout is uncertain (and indeed is likely to be zero
much of the time). I say “discounted” because the bailout may be received next year or in 30 years, and
we need to discount accordingly. Clearly, this estimate will depend on many firm choices and attributes,
including its leverage ratio, the maturity structure of its liabilities, the risk characteristics of its
investment portfolio, and its incentive compensation schemes. For example, the expected bailout will be
higher for firms with highly risky investments than for firms with less risky portfolios.
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Having done this calculation, the government then charges the firm a tax that is exactly equal to
the expected discounted value of the firm’s bailouts. Just as in the pollution example, this
measurement-plus-taxation policy confronts the firm with a tax schedule that translates its choices into
a cost paid by the firm. The tax amount exactly equals the extra cost borne by the taxpayers because of
bailouts, appropriately adjusted for risk and the time value of money. Knowing that it faces this tax
schedule, the firm no longer has an incentive to undertake inefficiently risky investments. Its investment
choices will be socially efficient. It is useful to tax a financial institution producing a risk externality, just
as it is useful to tax a firm producing a pollution externality. The purpose of the tax in both instances is
to ensure that the firm pays the full costs—private and social—of its production decisions.
I emphasized that the pollution tax corrects the pollution externality without creating any new
inefficiencies for the firm. The risk tax has the same property. Policymakers are considering a host of
regulatory responses to the events of the past two and a half years, including higher capital
requirements, leverage caps, and restrictions on incentive compensation. All of these potential changes
are good in that they serve to lower the amount of risk-taking by financial institutions. However, they
may also create new kinds of inefficiency for the targeted firms. For example, imposing new restrictions
on incentive compensation may hamper a firm’s ability to motivate its employees. In contrast, my
proposed risk tax, like the pollution tax, corrects the risk externality without creating any new
inefficiencies.
The proposed tax does require bank supervisors to calculate the expected present value of
future bailout payments. These calculations are likely to be complex in a number of ways. Moreover, the
calculations could well be controversial. Financial institutions that follow highly risky strategies get
especially high profits when those strategies are working. Thus, supervisors would be required to levy
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high risk taxes on exactly those institutions that appear extremely successful. For these reasons, it would
be useful to develop an objective way to compute the required tax using market information.
Here’s what I have in mind. Suppose that, for every relevant financial institution, the
government issues a “rescue bond.” The rescue bond pays a variable coupon equal to 1/1000 of the
transfers made from the taxpayer to the institution or its stakeholders. (I pick 1/1000 out of the air; any
fixed fraction will do.) Much of the time, this coupon will be zero, because bailouts aren’t necessary and
so the firm will not receive transfers. However, just like the institution’s stakeholders, the owners of the
rescue bond will occasionally receive a large payment. In a well-functioning market, the price of this
bond is exactly equal to the 1/1000 of the expected discounted value of the transfers to the firm and its
stakeholders. Thus, the government should charge the financial firm a tax equal to 1000 times the price
of the bond.
Notice that this approach could be used for a wide variety of financial institutions, including
nonbanks. In principle, the government need not figure out in advance exactly which are systemically
important and which are not. Instead, it could simply issue a rescue bond for every institution. Then, the
market itself could reveal how systemically important each institution is through the price of its rescue
bonds. Of course, markets are not always perfect, and it would be inappropriate to rely only on market
measures to compute the appropriate taxes. However, the prices of rescue bonds would contain
valuable information that should be an important input into the supervisory process.
As I mentioned at the beginning, Congress is in the process of considering changes to the
financial regulatory system. In December, the House passed the Wall Street Reform and Consumer
Protection Act. The Senate is currently deliberating the Restoring American Financial Stability Act.
There is much to like in both pieces of legislation. However, neither piece of legislation incorporates the
kind of risk tax that I have described to you. The Senate bill proposes no new taxes on financial
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institutions, unless some fail. In that event, taxes could be levied on surviving large financial institutions,
regardless of whether or not they had actually engaged in excessive risk-taking. The House bill has a
new risk-based assessment on large banks and hedge funds. Such a risk-adjusted tax should have
desirable incentive effects on the targeted firms. However, the tax will end once it has raised $150
billion. This cap is problematic, because once the tax is ended, so too will its desirable incentive effects.
Why do the bills fail to include new levies of the kind that I propose? In my view, both bills
significantly understate the extreme economic forces that lead to bailouts during financial crises.
Indeed, the opening language of the Senate bill actually declares that it will end taxpayer bailouts. This
objective is laudable. But it is not achievable – and thinking that it is can lead to poor choices about the
structure of financial regulation.
To wrap up: Bailouts will inevitably happen during financial crises to prevent runs and systemic
collapse. We need to structure financial regulation so as to limit the size and occurrence of these
bailouts. How should we best design such regulations? The social distortion we face is that debt
guarantees create a risk externality, because financial institutions do not bear the full costs of their
investment choices. Financial regulation should be designed so as to best control that externality. As is
true with any externality, the risk externality can be eliminated with a well-designed tax system. Figuring
out the right tax may be complicated, but the task can be eased using appropriate information from
financial markets.
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Cite this document
APA
Narayana Kocherlakota (2010, May 9). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20100510_narayana_kocherlakota
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20100510_narayana_kocherlakota,
author = {Narayana Kocherlakota},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2010},
month = {May},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20100510_narayana_kocherlakota},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}