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Thursday, August 15, 2024

Michael Reddell: Still a bad idea


The Minister of Finance has, over the last couple of weeks, been trailing various possible changes in the financial system. At the National Party conference there was the suggestion of trying to beef up Kiwibank, including by the injection of some additional capital from other than direct central government sources. And last Friday, there was an interview with the Herald’s Jenee Tibshraeny in which the Minister talked up the idea of overriding various bits of policy that are now squarely the legal responsibility of the Reserve Bank.

Commentators suggest all this talk is to a considerable degree about preparing the ground for the release next week of the final report of the Commerce Commission’s report on elements of the banking sector, perhaps trying to ensure that there is little plausible ground for Labour or the Greens to attack the government on banking profits, access to services, or whatever.

I’m not going to respond in depth to all the Minister’s suggestions. On Kiwibank, I largely agree with VUW banking academic (and former regulator) Martien Lubberink’s column, and (rarely, and as it happens, even with John Key). If it were me, I would sell 100 per cent of Kiwibank tomorrow, simply because there is no good reason for a government to own a commercial bank, but I am even more wary of partial privatisation of a bank than of the status quo).

The Minister also suggested that she might change the law to force the Reserve Bank to (a) lower bank capital requirements, and b) provide carveouts for some or other favoured groups. Now, as it happens, I have long argued that prudential regulatory policy settings should be decided by the Minister of Finance, on the advice of the Reserve Bank and The Treasury. As Willis notes, she is accountable, and the Reserve Bank is not (although the Minister decided to reinforce that effective unaccountability recently by further extending the term of the chair of the Reserve Bank Board – and it is the board that now wields the prudential policysetting powers). But if you really want to make a change like that you do it after wide and serious consultation, or perhaps even as part of a well-trailed campaign promise, not simply (as it seems) to play distraction because another government agency might be about to release a briefly awkward report. I’m also inclined to think bank capital requirements are higher than is really warranted (that was my view when the policy was being set five years ago and remains so today) but if you want to be taken seriously as a Minister of Finance, you don’t just drop such a view into an interview – with, it appears, nothing in support – you outline carefully your case, or commission some reviewers to look into the matter carefully. Martien Lubberink also addressed this set of Willis comments, including this apt line.



But the item in the Minister’s grab-bag that I wanted to comment on was around the remuneration of settlement account balances held by banks at the Reserve Bank. On these balances – the aggregate level of which is determined wholly and solely by the Reserve Bank – banks are paid the OCR (currently 5.5%). The level of settlement cash balances is currently around $43 billion – off its highs, but still hugely higher than the $7bn or so that was more common pre-Covid. The reason for the difference? LSAP bond purchases by the Reserve Bank, and the subsidised direct lending (under the so-called “Funding for Lending” scheme) from the Reserve Bank to banks.

In the Herald interview the Minister is reported as saying that “she had asked officials for advice on the way the RBNZ manages banks’ settlement accounts”, and in further comments in the same interview making clear that she was referring to how interest was paid. She goes as far as to suggest that it might be appropriate to amend the Reserve Bank Act to compel any change in approach that she considered warranted.

The issue of remuneration of the high settlement cash balances has been around for a couple of years. I think I introduced it first to the New Zealand discussion with a post in late 2022 on a paper by a former Bank of England Deputy Governor in which, among other issues, he suggested a possible case for paying below market rates on some portion of the large (at present) settlement cash balances in the UK. My post was headed “A bad idea”, which remains my view. That October 2022 post prompted Tibshraeny to give the issue a bit of coverage, which in turned seemed to prompt the then Minister of Finance Grant Robertson to ask for some official advice on the matter. Tibshraeny OIAed that advice, and I wrote about it in another post in March 2023. Neither the Reserve Bank nor The Treasury were at all enthusiastic, and there even Grant Robertson – who, we later learned, had at the same time been toying with windfall profits taxes on banks – left it. It was, after all, on current legislation simply a matter for the Reserve Bank (the OCR, the rate paid on settlement cash balances, is the primary instrument of monetary policy, and the Reserve Bank has operational independence).

There is a bit of a view around in some quarters that changing remuneration practices could undermine the effectiveness of monetary policy (in fact, it was one of the lines the Reserve Bank used on Robertson). That isn’t necessarily so. Tiered approaches have been used elsewhere (including by the ECB when they had negative interest rates, as a subsidy to banks in that case), and so long as one clearly distinguishes between a first tranche that received a nil or below market rate from the marginal balances on which the full OCR would be paid, effective monetary control would not be impaired. But that doesn’t make the policy option the Minister was openly toying with a better idea. In fact, it is still a very bad idea. Bank settlement account balances don’t just arrive in a vacuum – rather they are a counterpart to a change in some or other items on bank balance sheets (eg a bank increases its settlement account balances when it wins deposits from another bank, or (in this case) when (say) a customer sells government bonds to the Reserve Bank and deposits the proceeds in a bank account, on which the customer will normally and reasonably expect a return). Running a tiered approach to remuneration of settlement cash balances, of the sort Paul Tucker first proposed a couple of years ago, is simply an arbitrary tax on banks, and financial intermediation more generally, without any analytical foundations or – if the RB simply did it – without any parliamentary scrutiny. Taxes should be imposed by those whom we elect, our MPs sitting in Parliament.

But changing the law to enable the Minister to direct the bank on policy on remuneration of settlement accounts, or simply to mandate a completely different model, would be hardly any better than the RB just arbitrarily making such a change. There would be some formal democratic legitimacy, but for a policy that has just no substantive merit. As there was no good case for a windfall profits tax for banks, so there is no decent case – not even a shred of one – for a targeted ongoing tax specifically on banks. It would be arbitrary, inefficient, largely borne by New Zealand depositors and borrowers, and would send a simply dreadful signal, at a time when international markets are already looking askance at the Reserve Bank and the conduct of policy – and the policy “debate” more generally.

I don’t suppose it is very likely that Willis and the government will end up doing any of the things she trailed in last week’ Herald interview. Doing them probably wasn’t the point – rather the pursuit of a good headline with a certain sector of the New Zealand audience, narrowing room for Labour and the Greens, seems to have been the point. Empty populist rhetoric seems a description closer to the mark than serious considered policy options and analysis (note that not a hint of any of this appeared in the election campaign, less than a year ago). Perhaps the rhetoric plays well with some focus groups, but it hardly enhances any reputation Willis aspires to to be (and be seen as) a more serious Minister of Finance (focused on things that might make a real difference) than her predecessor.

I’ve already noted that Willis could readily have changed the chair of the Reserve Bank board when his term expired (her government has been happy to replace various other chairs in agencies where dismissal at will as an option). She could have filled the vacancies on the board with people better qualified than those Robertson appointed but hasn’t done anything about that either. It remains almost beyond comprehension that she didn’t move on either front, and suggests she isn’t really serious about any of this. In the same vein, each year the Minister of Finance writes a Letter of Expectation to the Board, an opportunity to highlight her priorities or things she wants the board and Bank to have regard to etc. The 2024 letter is sitting on the Bank’s website, and has not a hint of any of the sorts of issues/concerns Willis was raising in the Herald interview. She also hasn’t revised the Financial Policy Remit (a new tool) issued by Robertson a couple of years ago. There are things around the Reserve Bank that the Minister can’t easily or quickly fix (eg she is stuck with the Governor, unless he chooses to go early, for another 3.5 years), but she has shown no sign of doing any of the things she could (eg Board chair and vacancies, unwinding new indemnities the Bank has been given) or of using any moral suasion (eg through the letter of expectation) around financial policy issues or the Bank’s budgetary excesses.

So it all just looks a lot like a search for a good headline, and political operatives managing tactical risks for a couple of weeks, rather than a Minister with any sort of serious interest in, or intent towards, a much better central bank, whether in its monetary policy or financial regulatory roles. Perhaps in that sense she and the Governor – who seemed to have such a testy relationship when National was in Opposition – deserve each other. It is just that New Zealanders deserve much better from both roles.

(I have submitted an OIA this morning for the advice etc around remuneration on settlement cash balances. It will be interesting to see if either Treasury or the Bank are giving Willis even slightly different advice now than they gave Grant Robertson last year (but it seems unlikely).

Michael Reddell spent most of his career at the Reserve Bank of New Zealand, where he was heavily involved with monetary policy formulation, and in financial markets and financial regulatory policy, serving for a time as Head of Financial Markets. Michael blogs at Croaking Cassandra - where this article was sourced.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

If the State wants to "beef up" its Kiwibank creation, it should at least do ALL its banking with it?