On Nationalisation

The debate on bank nationalisation on this site and elsewhere has been taking place at an impressively high level.    Owing to the efforts of Karl and others, we stand a much better chance of having a rational banking policy.   Yet I can’t help being puzzled at the depth and breadth of the support for nationalisation from so many leading economists.    I have no doubt that this support for the state ownership of such a critical sector of the economy is not a position easily come to.   What has led so many liberal-leaning economists to support nationalisation? 

As best I can read it, there is a huge fear of government failure at one level, and a relatively relaxed attitude to failure at another.   The driving fear – indeed prediction – is NAMA will significantly overpay for bank assets, imposing a potentially huge cost on taxpayers.    On the other hand, while advocates of nationalisation are well aware of the dangers of politicised credit allocation, I think it is fair to say they believe we can devise institutions that would allow arms-length control and speedy re-privatisation. 

I weigh the risks of these two forms of potential government failure differently.    On the overpayment risk, a critical achievement of the debate so far is to shine a searchlight on the danger.   With this danger firmly in mind, it should be possible to devise effective and transparent mechanisms for determining and paying expected value.   Innovative mechanisms – such as Patrick Honohan’s idea to combine lower direct payments with shares in NAMA – can help attenuate overpayment bias and reduce risk to the taxpayer.   Bottom line: I think this risk is manageable with due attention. 

I am more worried about the danger of a politicised credit system – even with politicians having the best of intentions going into their new roles.   On my reading, the international evidence on bank ownership and performance raises a huge cautionary flag.   (A good survey is:  William Megginson (2005), “The Economics of Bank Privatization,” Journal of Banking and Finance, 29, 1931-80; working paper version here).   While recognising that selective quotations do not prove a point, I think the following from another paper by Andrei Shleifer and co-authors gives a good sense of the danger:

A government can participate in the financing of firms in a variety of ways: it can provide subsidies directly, it can encourage private banks through regulation and suasion to lend to politically desirable projects, or it can own financial institutions, completely or partially, itself.   The advantage of owning banks–as opposed to regulating or owning all projects outright–is that ownership allows the government extensive control over the choice of projects bieng financed while leaving the implementation of these projects to the private sector. Ownership of banks thus promotes the government’s goals in both the “development” and “political” theories.

. . .

We find that higher government ownership of banks is associated with slower subsequent development of the finanical system, lower economic growth, and, in particular, lower growth of productivity.   These results, and particularly the finding of low productivity growth in countries with high government ownership of banks, are broadly supportive of the political view of the effects of government interference in markets (LaPorta, Rafael, Florencio Lopez-de-Silanes, and Andrei Shleifer (2002), “Government Ownership of Banks,” Journal of Finance, 57(1), 265-301).   

Perhaps paradoxically, the danger of politically directed lending is increased by the compelling rationale for a co-ordinated expansion in credit that nationalisation could facilitate.  Lucien Bebchuck and Itay Goldstein do a good job outlining the basic co-ordination failure and rationale for intervention.  The basic idea is that the creditworthiness of firms increases with a broad expansion in credit given interdependencies in the profitability of investment projects.   A coordinated credit expansion can then shift the economy from a bad (low creditworthiness, low credit) equilibrium to a good (high creditworthiness, high credit) equilibrium.   Nationalised banks would certainly be in a good position to solve the coordination problem.  But such directed lending is likely to be the thin end of the wedge to a more pervasive politician-directed credit allocation system.   I think the long-run costs would be lower with a coordinated expansion achieved through transparent fiscal instruments.  

The ease with which the government has come to direct the investment strategy of the National Pension Reserve Fund provides a useful warning.   As reported recently by the National Treasury Management Agency, investments “under the direction of the Minister for Finance” now account for 23.4 percent of the total fund (and that only includes investments in the preference shares of Bank of Ireland).  Here again there is a rationale for the government’s direction (though I believe it is a weak one given that international bond markets are still very much open for Irish debt).   But any semblance of arms-length governance is thoroughly shot – with as far as I can tell barely a whimper from economists. 

Two final brief points relating to majority government ownership (the most likely alternative to full nationalisation): 

First, in their Irish Times piece the proponents of nationalisation worry that the government would leave the banks undercapitalised under majority government ownership.    Under nationalisation, they see the government having a strong incentive to recapitalise the bank to maximise divestiture value.   However, given the government will eventually want to divest itself under both majority share ownership and nationalisation, I do not see why the incentive to recapitalise is weaker under the majority ownership option.  

Finally, it is reasonable to question whether the risk of politicisation is any less under majority government ownership than under full nationalisation.   However, a key focus of work on politicisation has been on cost to politicians in exercising control.    The transparency and governance institutions of a publicly traded company should make it more costly for politicians to direct the banks’ credit allocation for political ends.  

The concept of ‘legitimate expectations’

The Irish  Times reported in yesterday’s edition on the debate in government over whether to try to effect savings in child benefit expenditure (which currently costs almost €2.5 billion per annum) through means testing or through taxing benefit payments. The report concluded that “briefing notes released under the Freedom of Information Act show senior officials are concerned about the legal implications of major changes to benefit payments. Concern has been expressed that the State could be vulnerable to legal action where recipients may have had a legitimate expectation a welfare benefit would continue.”

It seems to me that to claim a legitimate expectation that a welfare payment (or, presumably, any government payment) would continue would make government decision-making, whether in fiscal policy or welfare policy, totally unmanageable. At face value, it would seem to make any change to a government expenditure scheme, once introduced, impossible (and why stop at expenditure – did we not also have a legitimate expectation that the government would refrain from introducing an income levy?).

It is interesting to contrast this with payments which were actually cut in the budget. In agriculture, for example, annual payments for those farmers enrolled in the Rural Environment Protection Scheme (REPS) were cut by 17% in 2009. There is a much stronger argument against cutting these payments as these are contractual payments – farmers enter into an agreeement to follow certain environmentally-sensitive farming practices for a five year period, in return for a payment from  the State. However, the State has inserted a clause into the Regulation (away towards the end under Paragraph 28) that “The Minister reserves the right to vary, where occasion so demands, the amount of financial aid wherever specified in the Scheme subject at all times to the provisions of any relevant European Union legislation.” Given that farmers incur costly obligations on entering REPS, this unilateral right  on the part of the State to vary the amount of payments may appear rather extraordinary. Particularly given that if a farmer were to decide to leave the  Scheme in response to a change in payments, then aid already paid must be re-imbursed. If these farmers had no legitimate expectation that payments would continue at the level agreed at the start of the 5-year scheme despite a contractual agreement with the Department of Agriculture Fisheries and Food, it seems extraordinary that officials are fearful that any change to welfare payments might be challenged on the basis of ‘what we have, we hold’.

The Global Nature of the Recession

Paul Gillespie writes on this topic in today’s Irish Times, covering Kevin’s recent work and some of the other work cited on this blog: here.

Where does Ireland stand?

A hugely important debate is currently underway in the ECB, according to Brendan Keenan. The distinguished Cypriot Governor, Athanasios Orphanides, understands the gravity of this crisis and the logical consequences for policy makers, but not everyone agrees with him.

What, I wonder, is the Irish Central Bank saying in Frankfurt?

IT Opinion Piece on Nationalisation

Readers may be interested in this article in today’s Irish Times in which some contributors to this blog and a number of other leading academics argue in favour of temporary nationalisation of the banks.