Tuesday, September 15, 2015

Did emergency liquidity assistance (ELA) of the ECB delay the bankruptcy of Greek banks?

safe-frankfurt.de/fileadmin/user_upload/editor_common/Policy_Center/Goetz_et_al_Did_ELA_delay_bankruptcy.pdf

1. Introduction
The European Central Bank (ECB) increased the emergency liquidity assistance (ELA) for Greek banks from €50 billion in February 2015 to approximately €90 billion in June 2015. Its actions were accompanied by a discussion among academics, politicians and practitioners
regarding the legitimacy of the ELA. Some have even accused the ECB of deliberately delaying the bankruptcy filing of already insolvent Greek banks. We take the claim regarding insolvency delay as an opportunity to highlight the underlying economics of the ELA program and discuss its legitimacy in the current situation. We start by
characterizing the complex interrelationship of the European Union, the ECB and the Greek banks through the lens of financial economics, with a particular focus on the political economy of a monetary union with incomplete fiscal union (or fiscal consolidation). Combining these two issues, we examine the decision of the ECB to continue the provision of ELA to Greek banks. Our conclusions, drawn from the analysis, do not support the claim that the ECB’s actions are consistent with a delayed filing for insolvency.

Monday, September 7, 2015

Towards a consensus on the causes of the EZ Crisis | VOX, CEPR’s Policy Portal

Towards a consensus on the causes of the EZ Crisis | VOX, CEPR’s Policy Portal

There is not yet a consensus on what more needs to be done in order to cope with the Eurozone Crisis. This new Vox eBook concerns the causes and possible solutions to the problem. In it, the authors highlight three ultimate causes for the Crisis. First, policy failures allowed the imbalances to become very large. A second cause is the lack of institutions to absorb shocks at the EZ level. The third one is crisis mismanagement.
The e-book

Tuesday, September 1, 2015