Loosening The Bank/Sovereign Feedback Loop

 | Jun 12, 2014 02:36AM ET

Two economists at the Division of International Finance, Board of Governors, Federal Reserve System, have written a discussion paper on sovereign debt crises. Though the paper makes no specific reference to Argentina, at this moment in history, as the long-lasting Argentine debacle seems at last to be coming to a head, the paper makes especially timely reading.

The gist of the paper, by Ricardo Correa [pictured here] and Horacio Sapriza, is that there is a tight feedback loop between sovereigns and banks, and that the real economy (“Main Street” in the usual expression) suffers from the tightness of that loop.

Breaking the loop, then, should be “an important policy priority.”

Certainly twin crises, of a country’s banking system and of its Treasury, have become quite common.

Why? The most obvious impact of a banking crisis upon a government is that governments now routinely assume safety net responsibilities in connection with their local banking systems. This comes about through obvious and appealing motives (who could be in favor of bank runs and the devastation of life’s savings they can create?). But it does have the consequence that if the banking industry is broadly in trouble, then the government’s credit will come into question as well.

Here’s the thesis in the form of a simple graphic.