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The 'surprising' origin and nature of financial crisesThe 'surprising' origin and nature of financial crises

The 'surprising' origin and nature of financial crises

Ricardo J. Caballero

About this book

Severe financial crises in developed economies are produced by a combination of three factors: negative surprises that create uncertainty, concentration of macroeconomic risk in leveraged financial institutions and a slow policy response. We propose a policy instrument, Tradable Insurance Credits (TICs), designed to address crises stemming from these factors. TICs would be issued by the central bank and give their holder the right to attach a central bank guarantee to assets on its balance sheet, but only during a financial crisis; financial institutions would be required to keep a minimum holding of TICs. TIC policy could be carried out in a similar way to monetary policy and fits into existing institutional frameworks; we examine how TICs could have been used to address the 2007-2009 financial crisis in a faster and more systematic way than the ad-hoc measures undertaken. Keywords: financial crises, Knightian uncertainty, macroeconomic risk, credit default swaps, asset insurance. JEL Classifications: G01, G28, E58.

Details

OL Work ID
OL15732247W

Subjects

MacroeconomicsEconometric modelsFinancial crisesCredit control

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