Macroprudential Policy with Leakages

45 Pages Posted: 17 Sep 2018 Last revised: 11 Jun 2026

See all articles by Julien Bengui

Julien Bengui

Université de Montréal

Javier Bianchi

Federal Reserve Banks - Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis

Multiple version iconThere are 2 versions of this paper

Date Written: September 2018

Abstract

The outreach of macroprudential policies is likely limited in practice by imperfect regulation enforcement, whether due to shadow banking, regulatory arbitrage, or other regulation circumvention schemes. We study how such concerns affect the design of optimal regulatory policy in a workhorse model in which pecuniary externalities call for macroprudential taxes on debt, but with the addition of a novel constraint that financial regulators lack the ability to enforce taxes on a subset of agents. While regulated agents reduce risk taking in response to debt taxes, unregulated agents react to the safer environment by taking on more risk. These leakages undermine the effectiveness of macruprudential taxes but do not necessarily call for weaker interventions. A quantitative analysis of the model suggests that aggregate welfare gains and reductions in the severity and frequency of financial crises remain, on average, largely unaffected by even significant leakages.

Suggested Citation

Bengui, Julien and Bianchi, Javier, Macroprudential Policy with Leakages (September 2018). NBER Working Paper No. w25048, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3250594

Julien Bengui (Contact Author)

Université de Montréal ( email )

C.P. 6128 succursale Centre-ville
Montreal, Quebec H3C 3J7
Canada

Javier Bianchi

Federal Reserve Banks - Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis ( email )

90 Hennepin Avenue
Minneapolis, MN 55480
United States

Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?

Paper statistics

Downloads
34
Abstract Views
632
PlumX Metrics