91av

Global banking rules won’t stop next meltdown

Banks now have to keep money in reserve to carry them through hard times, but economists says this isn't enough

IT IS like storm-proofing a building with a paper towel. From 2015, the world’s banks will be , to prevent a repeat of the 2008 banking crisis. But economists say the rules will make little difference.

of the Mexican Central Bank endorses the move but says it doesn’t allow for the fact that bad debts can spread through the economy and take down many banks at once. This was at the heart of the 2008 crisis. “You have to incorporate contagion.”

of the University of Bath, UK, has modelled the effects of such rules and found they barely reduce this risk ().

Many economists say what’s needed is a system that can also identify threats ahead of time.

Topics: Economics