A Critical Evaluation of Bail-In as a Bank Recapitalisation Mechanism

32 Pages Posted: 25 Sep 2014

See all articles by Emilios Avgouleas

Emilios Avgouleas

University of Edinburgh - School of Law

Charles Goodhart

London School of Economics & Political Science (LSE) - Financial Markets Group

Date Written: July 2014

Abstract

Many of the world’s developed economies have introduced, or are planning to introduce, bank bail-in regimes. Both the planned EU resolution regime and the European Stability Mechanism Treaty involve the participation of bank creditors in bearing the costs of bank recapitalization via the bail-in process as one of the (main) mechanisms for restoring a failing bank to health. There is a long list of actual or hypothetical advantages attached to bail-in centred bank recapitalizations. Most importantly the bail-in tool involves replacing the implicit public guarantee, on which fractional reserve banking has operated, with a system of private penalties. The bail-in tool may, indeed, be much superior in the case of idiosyncratic failure. Nonetheless, there is need for a closer examination of the bail-in process, if it is to become a successful substitute to the unpopular bailout approach. This paper discusses some of its key potential shortcomings. It explains why bail-in regimes will fail to eradicate the need for an injection of public funds where there is a threat of systemic collapse, because a number of banks have simultaneously entered into difficulties, or in the event of the failure of a large complex cross-border bank, except in those cases where failure was clearly idiosyncratic.

Keywords: bail-in, bank recapitalisation, bank regulation, creditor flight, moral hazard

JEL Classification: G18, G28, K20, L51

Suggested Citation

Avgouleas, Emilios and Goodhart, Charles A.E., A Critical Evaluation of Bail-In as a Bank Recapitalisation Mechanism (July 2014). CEPR Discussion Paper No. DP10065, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2501539

Emilios Avgouleas (Contact Author)

University of Edinburgh - School of Law ( email )

Old College
South Bridge
Edinburgh, EH8 9YL
United Kingdom

Charles A.E. Goodhart

London School of Economics & Political Science (LSE) - Financial Markets Group ( email )

Houghton Street
London WC2A 2AE
United Kingdom
0207 955 7555 (Phone)
0207 242 1006 (Fax)

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