Why Regulating Banks Will Never Work: Greece As A Case Study

 | May 25, 2015 02:52AM ET

h3 Introduction

Large bank fines for manipulating currency rates are in the news. One reaction is “great, the bank regulators are finally cracking down with heavy fines.” I have a different take:

  • Bank regulation will never work;
  • Banks will continue to manipulate prices and take large risks;
  • Bank regulators will always be two steps behind the banks;
  • When and if banks get caught violating “rules”, they will pay the fines (not gladly but as a cost of doing business).

There is a better way to deal with this problem. Bank incentives and the markets in which they operate have to be changed. In the following, I explain why the regulation/fine model will never work using Greece as an example. I then set forth what this means and use the Greek situation to illustrate my conclusions.

h3 Greece – Who in Their Right Mind Would Have Bought Its Debt?/h3

Table 1 provides economic data for Greece. Anyone taking the time to look at these numbers should have seen that by 2008, the wheels were most definitely coming off. By then, the government deficit has grown to almost 10%. And while the deficit probably kept the unemployment rate from growing more rapidly, this was clearly not a sustainable economic path.

h3 Table 1. – The Greek Economy/h3