speeches · July 6, 2010
Regional President Speech
Narayana Kocherlakota · President
More on Taxing Risk
Narayana Kocherlakota
President
Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis
Pre-Conference Workshop
Society for Economic Dynamics Annual Meeting
Montréal, Québec, Canada
July 7, 2010
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Introduction
The title of this workshop is: “Lessons from the Recent Crisis for Monetary Policy and Financial
Regulation.” I suspect that I’m on this conference program because I am a monetary policymaker.
Nonetheless, my remarks will focus on the lessons of the crisis for financial regulation. In doing so, I’m
continuing an institutional tradition. My predecessor, Gary Stern, and my current head of supervision,
Ron Feldman, literally wrote the book on how to deal with “Too Big to Fail” in 2004. Long before that,
while working at the Minneapolis Fed, John Kareken and Neil Wallace sounded the alarm about the
moral hazard generated by deposit insurance. This institutional history makes it especially important
that I emphasize that any views I share today are my own, and not necessarily those of others in the
Federal Reserve System.
My own thinking about financial regulation begins with what I see as the inevitability of
collective mistakes. In the mid-2000s, we—as American investors, home owners, 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.
My view is that 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.
My theme today is that, even though they are inevitable, the likelihood and the magnitude of
financial crises and bailouts 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
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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. Taxes are a good response because they create
incentives for firms to internalize the costs that would otherwise be external.
I will emphasize the desirable incentive effects of taxes. Much of the dialog about taxes on
financial institutions emphasizes revenue collection goals. I will argue that correcting incentives and
generating revenue are largely separate objectives. The United States could design a tax system with the
right incentives and collect $5 billion per year from financial institutions. On the other hand, Canada
could design a tax system with the right incentives and collect no revenue from financial institutions.
Countries could well differ on their revenue collection objectives. But all should be interested in getting
incentives in place to deter excessive risk-taking by financial institutions.
Many policymakers are advocating taxation as a key instrument of financial regulation. Sweden
has implemented a bank tax. The United Kingdom, France, and Germany seem likely to follow. In the
United States, the Obama administration has recommended the adoption of a levy on large financial
institutions. The International Monetary Fund recently released a staff report that recommends a global
tax on the financial sector.
In its June 27, 2010 communiqué, the G-20 agreed that countries should finance the response to
financial crises through policies that accomplish five goals:
1. Protect taxpayers
2. Reduce the risks from the financial sector
3. Protect the flow of credit in good times and bad
4. Take into account individual countries’ circumstances and options
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5. Help promote a level playing field.
The G-20 made no specific recommendation about how to achieve these goals. But I hope to convince
you that taxation is the best way to meet all five objectives.
My remarks today will overlap with those that I gave in Minneapolis on May 10.1 I build on the
previous speech in two ways. First, I spend more time explaining the advantages of taxes over other
regulatory responses. Second, while I discuss my preferred ideal tax system, I also describe some
essential features for any desirable tax system.
Inevitability of Bailouts
I began by saying 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 their funds out
quickly. For this reason, financial institutions’ liabilities often take the form of short-term debt and
deposits. But short-term financing instruments are intrinsically prone to self-fulfilling crises of
confidence commonly referred to as “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.
1 Kocherlakota, Narayana R. 2010. “Taxing Risk.” Comments at the Economic Club of Minnesota (May 10):
Minneapolis, Minn. Online at http://www.minneapolisfed.org/news_events/pres/nrk05-10-10.pdf and
http://www.c-spanvideo.org/program/ie/223884.
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This story is hardly a new one. It’s exactly why we have deposit insurance: to prevent runs by
reassuring short-term 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 are insolvent and
which are sound. And during a 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 systemic collapse, and so during times of crisis, they end up providing debt
guarantees for 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 have emphasized the need for better resolution mechanisms as part of financial
regulatory reform. Different people mean different things by this, but most want to impose losses on
debt holders. I’m not opposed to faster and better resolution 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 those mechanisms 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 and thereby
prevent system-wide collapse.
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Investment Inefficiencies
So, that’s my first point: Bailouts are inevitable during financial crises. Let me move to the second:
Anticipation of bailouts creates inefficiency 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. In such a world, 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 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 the natural market relationship between risk and cost. Depositors and debt holders are now
partially insulated from increases in investment risk, and so they 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 cost 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
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generate financial crises. But the misallocations do mean that society loses a lot from those mistakes—a
lot more than is efficient.
Regulatory Responses
There are a number of regulatory responses that would help mitigate the misallocation problem just
described. In its June 27 communiqué, the G-20 put special emphasis on enhancing capital and liquidity
requirements. Both would deter risk-taking by financial institutions. However, it is important to
understand and consider the costs that they impose on an economy.
Let me talk first about capital. High capital requirements are designed to reduce the amount of
debt issued by a financial institution. With less debt, there are fewer failing firms that policymakers must
bail out during financial crises. With lowered needs for government debt guarantees, there is less
inefficiency. Consider the extreme situation of a financial institution that is financed only by equity, and
not by debt or deposits. Such an institution would never get any bailouts from the government, and so
would not engage in excessive risk-taking.
However, financial economists have long recognized that debt has important benefits. Outside
investors are typically not as well-informed about firm attributes as decision makers inside a firm. In this
context, debt—and the associated threat of bankruptcy—helps discipline firm insiders. For example, one
essential feature of equity is that a firm can vary its dividend payments to investors. But this very
flexibility allows managers and other firm insiders more freedom to divert firm income to themselves
and away from outside investors. Having to repay debt imposes much sharper constraints on
managers—a discipline that both equity holders and debt holders value. As a result, firms that use a mix
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of debt and equity should be able to raise more outside funds for a given investment opportunity than
firms that use equity alone.
The above argument applies to all kinds of debt. (In passing, the argument depends on the firm’s
debt only being guaranteed during financial crises. Perfectly guaranteed debt holders, such as
depositors, will impose no discipline on managers.) However, short-term debt is especially relevant.
Suppose outside investors learn that a firm’s managerial team has been making poor choices. In this
context, equity holders and long-term debt holders cannot retrieve their investments without finding
some other firm outsider to buy them. In contrast, short-term debt holders and depositors have the
ability to withdraw their entire investment from the firm without using sales.
To sum up: It is true that debt—especially short-term debt—increases the size of government
transfers that a given firm will potentially receive during a financial panic. From that point of view,
restrictions on debt issuance are attractive. At the same time, debt—especially short-term debt—helps
align the incentives of managerial insiders and investing outsiders. Tougher capital standards will
undercut this alignment, and inhibit economic growth.
Another potentially useful regulatory response emphasized in the G-20 communiqué is to
require financial institutions to hold more liquid assets. Again, such a requirement would help reduce
the need for government bailouts. Consider an extreme example. Suppose all financial institutions were
required to hold cash equal in value to their deposits. There would be no need for deposit insurance, as
depositors would always be sure that they could obtain their funds.
Such a regulation would obviously be inefficient, though. While it is certainly true that bank
depositors have the right to retrieve their deposits within seconds, they rarely exercise that right. The
typical dollar stays in a bank for many months before being withdrawn. This timing means that banks
can safely invest deposits in longer-term, higher-yield investments. Indeed, many economists have
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identified this so-called “maturity transformation” of demandable deposits into long-term investments
as being the defining feature of banks.
So there are benefits and costs associated with liquidity requirements, just as there are with
capital requirements. Banks with more liquid asset holdings are certainly better protected against the
possibility of runs, but they’re also performing less of the maturity transformation that improves capital
allocation and economic efficiency. The right liquidity requirement for a given bank will depend critically
on the nature of its investment opportunities, the fluctuations in the inflows and outflows of its
deposits, and its ability to access short-term debt funding.
Along with capital and liquidity requirements, financial regulators have a host of other
approaches at their disposal to curb excessive risk-taking. With this portfolio of possible instruments, it
is important to find the right combination of regulations for financial firms. However, as we have
discussed for capital and liquidity requirements, all regulations have private costs as well as social
benefits. Because of these private costs, regulators cannot find the optimal mix of regulatory
requirements for a firm without solving that firm’s cost minimization problem with respect to capital,
liquidity and many other variables.
Taxes
Is there a different government response to excessive risk-taking that would allow regulators to avoid
solving the cost minimization problems of financial firms? In what follows, I 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,
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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.”
This same distinction between private and social costs applies to financial institutions that enjoy
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 generated, 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 buy clean energy instead.
Making these trade-offs requires a tremendous amount of firm-specific information and firm-specific
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cost minimization analysis. 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 generated by the firm, rather
than how the firm creates it. The central problem here is that pollution has a social cost that the firm
does not internalize when choosing its level of production. From society’s point of view, the firm will
generate excessive pollution. However, the firm will create the socially efficient level of pollution if it is
required to pay for—or internalize—its full social cost.
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 the
costs of 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 pollution. Just as importantly, it
will automatically choose to create that pollution—and the factory’s more beneficial outputs—in a cost-
minimizing fashion. Governments do not need to solve the firm’s cost-minimization problem.
Lessons for Financial Regulation
These lessons about pollution regulation translate directly into lessons for financial regulation. As in the
pollution case, a financial institution should be taxed for the amount of risk it creates that is borne by
taxpayers. Once the firm faces the correct tax, it will choose to produce that risk with a cost-minimizing
mix of capital, liquidity, incentive compensation and other factors. As in the pollution case, using taxes
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to discourage excessive risk saves the government from actually trying to solve the cost-minimization
problem of financial firms.
This reasoning suggests the following idealized 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. Getting the right discount rate is
important. The bailouts will be large when the stock market and the economy are doing poorly. In the
language of finance, the bailouts have a negative beta. It follows that the appropriate discount rate
should be less—and possibly substantially less—than the rate of return on Treasuries.
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, its
incentive compensation schemes, and its involvement in the payment system. For example, the
expected bailout will be higher for firms with highly risky investments than for firms with less risky
portfolios.
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
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as it is useful to tax a firm generating a pollution externality. The purpose of the tax in both instances is
to ensure that the targeted firm pays the full costs—private and social—of its production decisions.
My proposed tax creates the right kinds of incentives for risk-taking. As I mentioned in the
introduction, these incentives are distinct from revenue objectives. The risk tax will raise some amount
of revenue. Governments wishing to collect more revenue from the financial sector can impose an
additional one-time levy on financial institutions that is not risk-based. Other governments may want to
collect less revenue from the financial sector. In that case, they can transfer back some of the risk tax
collections. These transfers need to be structured so that they do not undo the incentives in the risk tax
itself. For example, they could simply be spread evenly across all financial institutions.
A risk 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 high risk taxes on
exactly those institutions that appear to be extremely successful. To address these issues of complexity
and controversy, it would be of great value to develop an objective way—with the use of market
information— to compute the required tax.
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 1/1,000 of the
transfers made from the taxpayer to the institution or its stakeholders. (I pick 1/1,000 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 1/1,000 of the expected discounted value of the transfers to the firm and its
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stakeholders. Thus, the government should charge the financial firm a tax equal to 1,000 times the price
of the bond. Note that the “rescue” bond is only a measurement device. In particular, it is not part of the
financial firm’s rescue.
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. It may not always be appropriate to rely only on
market measures to compute the appropriate taxes. However, even in these cases, the prices of rescue
bonds would contain valuable information that should be an important input into the supervisory
process.
General Rules for Implementation
In describing the above tax system, I’ve glossed over a variety of political and administrative realities. In
this sense, I would have to say that my tax system should be viewed as an ideal. Nonetheless, like all
economic ideals, I believe that it suggests general rules that can be used to discipline the construction of
any tax on financial institution risk.
The first rule is that a useful tax on risk must take into account the existence of deposit
insurance. Deposit insurance means that deposit rates of return are independent of the underlying risk
in bank assets. Like any debt guarantee, it incentivizes excessive risk-taking by financial institutions. A
good tax must undo these incentives.
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In many countries, banks pay risk-based deposit insurance premia. If levied on top of an explicit
risk tax, these premia create the possibility of inefficient double taxation. However, it is straightforward
to design a tax system that avoids this possibility. First, calculate the overall tax on risk for the financial
institution (based on its assets, liabilities and other attributes). Then, deduct whatever premium the
bank is paying to the deposit insurer.
Alternatively, it may be desirable to simply re-label what I’m terming a “bank tax” or “risk tax”
as a “systemic insurance premium.” It could then be collected by a regulatory agency, as opposed to the
Treasury.
The second rule is that risk taxes must always be collected. Many of the proposals for taxes on
financial institutions (and the actual law in Sweden) put a cap on tax collections. Once that cap is
reached, banks will no longer face taxes for taking on extra risk and will again have an incentive to
engage in excessively risky investments.
As I indicated earlier, it’s important to keep revenue objectives separate from incentive
correction. Some governments may find it desirable to stop collecting revenues from the financial sector
after some point in time. They can readily do so while preserving the incentives of the risk tax system.
My point is that those incentives must always be kept in place.
The third rule is that any tax on risk must incorporate market information. The goal of a tax on
risk is to force financial institutions to internalize the costs that their investing decisions impose on
taxpayers by virtue of government debt guarantees. These costs are forward-looking valuations of
future risky cash flows. It is impossible to have accurate measures of the costs without market
information about both the quantity and the price of risk embedded in these cash flows.
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Rescue bonds provide one highly precise but perhaps impractical way to use market
information. A cruder, possibly more practical approach would be to use measures from the ratings
agencies. Moody’s and Standard & Poor’s each provide two distinct ratings for the debt of various
financial institutions. One rating considers the financial institutions as they are, and the other considers
the institutions in an imaginary world without government support. The difference between the two is
termed “ratings uplift” and it can be substantial. In principle, a regulator can translate these uplifts into
differences in debt yields, and thereby into measures of implicit government subsidies.
Conclusions
Let me close with some final thoughts about capital. As I stated earlier, the June 27 G-20 communiqué
emphasizes the role of capital requirements in forging a new regulatory structure. The communiqué
suggests that banks be required to hold enough capital “to withstand … stresses of a magnitude that
they experienced during the recent financial crisis” without government support. This response strikes
me as being problematic in a couple of ways.
First, good financial regulations should take into account the probability and timing of various
possible outcomes. The recent crisis is generally agreed to be the biggest of its kind since 1929. Should
financial institutions be required to protect themselves fully against shocks that take place just once in
eighty years? This kind of extreme risk aversion in regulatory design seems likely to create an undue
drag on economic growth.
Paradoxically, the G-20’s capital requirement proposal also strikes me as too weak. The
magnitude of our recent financial crisis was created in part by the investment decisions of leading global
financial institutions. These institutions have the ability to generate even bigger shocks and their
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creditors would be likely to receive even more substantial government transfers in that event. Good
regulation should deter them from creating the potential for adverse shocks bigger than those we have
observed historically. The proposed capital standard does not.
Thus, capital is at once too strong a tool and too weak a tool. More generally, it seems to me
that capital and liquidity requirements are intrinsically backwards-looking. We need forward-looking
instruments for what is intrinsically a forward-looking problem. And that’s a key reason why taxes,
based on market information, will work better.
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 frequency 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 to best control that externality. Capital and
liquidity requirements may be helpful, but they are likely to create inefficient drags on growth.
Instead, as is true with any externality, the risk externality can be eliminated with a well-
designed tax system. I’ve suggested some properties for a good tax system. In particular, I believe that
any such tax should embed appropriate information from financial markets.
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Cite this document
APA
Narayana Kocherlakota (2010, July 6). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20100707_narayana_kocherlakota
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20100707_narayana_kocherlakota,
author = {Narayana Kocherlakota},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2010},
month = {Jul},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20100707_narayana_kocherlakota},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}