全球经济、监管失灵与宽松货币:冰岛金融危机对监管金融业的启示

Andrew P. Morriss, Birgir T. Petursson
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引用次数: 4

摘要

2008年,冰岛成为第一个陷入危机的发达经济体,其银行业、货币价值和经济崩溃。这次破产使冰岛陷入了政治危机,并引发了冰岛与英国和荷兰之间关于破产银行责任的严重国际争端。2008年之前,冰岛被视为放松管制的典范;自2008年以来,它一直被视为金融自由化危险的典型代表。两者都不准确。相反,冰岛在财政和货币政策与监管措施之间的相互关系方面提供了一个警世故事。世界各国央行催生的过度流动性,冰岛的扩张性财政政策,以及对基本经济联系的不充分理解,创造了资本涌入冰岛并使其金融机构不堪重负的条件。欧盟和冰岛层面的监管失灵意味着,央行干预和存款保险等监管措施非但没有纠正问题,反而加剧了问题。本文探讨了这些关系,揭示了冰岛相对较小的规模和议会对危机的全面调查所揭示的联系。报告的结论是,如果要避免“下一个冰岛”,监管机构需要把注意力集中在加强市场反馈机制上,而不是试图引导经济。
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Global Economies, Regulatory Failure, & Loose Money: Lessons for Regulating the Finance Sector from Iceland's Financial Crisis
Iceland was the first developed economy to fall into crisis in 2008, with the collapse of its banking sector, currency value, and economy. The collapse threw Iceland into a political crisis and provoked a serious international dispute between Iceland and Britain and the Netherlands over responsibility for the failed banks. Prior to 2008 Iceland had been treated as the poster child for deregulation; since 2008 it has been held up as the poster child for the dangers of financial liberalization. Neither is accurate. Rather, Iceland presents a cautionary tale about the inter-relationships between fiscal and monetary policy and regulatory measures. Excessive liquidity fostered by central banks around the world, expansionary fiscal policies in Iceland, and inadequate understanding of fundamental economic linkages created conditions under which capital flooded Iceland and overwhelmed its financial institutions. Regulatory failures at the EU and Icelandic levels meant regulatory measures such as central bank interventions and deposit insurance exacerbated problems rather than correcting them. This paper explores those relationships, uncovering connections made visible by both Iceland’s relatively small size and the comprehensive parliamentary investigation into the crisis. It concludes that regulators need to focus attention on enhancing market-feedback mechanisms rather than on attempting to steer economies if they are to avoid “the next Iceland.”
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