Memo to Ed Miliband – you cannot regulate your way to competition
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Indeed, his argument looks especially strange when you look at his proposals. He does not want competition at the margins with a few small ‘challenger’ banks but new large banks. He complains about a banking market in which five banks control 85 per cent of the market and suggests that the same problems exist as in the energy market (in which there are six companies with a large share of the market). So, what is the right number of companies exactly? Clearly not five, or even six. Is it seven or eight? And how can we get to a banking market where eight companies rather than five control the lion’s share of the market? It is something that would be impossible to achieve in practice through state regulation.
The key policy proposal seems to be a cap on market share through a requirement to sell off branches once market share reaches a given level. This seems to be designed to reduce competition and customer service. The likely response by the banks is that they will sell off the least-used branches and thus reduce branch coverage. However, the proposal will undermine competition. What will happen when a bank nears the statutory limit on the share of the market? Tesco has been a market leader amongst supermarkets in recent years. Its market share increased to nearly 30 per cent simply because it was better than the rest. Now, its market share is falling again as new entrants (Lidl and Aldi) and niche players (Waitrose) expand and provide for customers’ changing needs. Imagine if Tesco’s market share had been capped at 25 per cent. What would its response have been as it reached that market share? Presumably it would have put up prices and/or reduced service levels. The idea that a statutory limit on size would make good performers perform better is at best counterintuitive and certainly unproven.
But what about the assertion that the industry performs badly? Well, a host of studies certainly do not confirm that hypothesis. A study by Dutch academics has the UK banking industry the fourth best in the EU (after excluding two countries with insufficient observations) and two of the better performers are Switzerland and Luxembourg which are special cases. Another study does show British banks providing much less capital to smaller businesses than their EU counterparts, but the UK also has a much larger market in non-bank finance – that has always been the case. A further study suggests that profit margins are around average for British banks but net interest margins are very, very low by international comparisons. This is the difference between interest rates on deposits and other forms of finance used to fund lending and interest rates on lending, so it is a good indication of whether customers are getting a good deal. A high margin means that customers are paying much more for a mortgage than they are getting on deposits. Insofar as margins have increased in the UK, government schemes such as Funding for Lending have been at least partially responsible as has the huge increase in bank capital regulation.
Of course, there have been some constraints on competition in recent years and not just in the form of Funding for Lending and bank capital regulation: Ed Miliband sat in a cabinet that encouraged the takeover of HBOS by Lloyds. We also desperately need innovation. But innovation does not come as a result of stopping the best performing firms from expanding. Innovation comes from lowering barriers to entry. New banks always complain about regulatory barriers to entry; financial regulators have decided to regulate the new forms of finance (crowd funding and peer-to-peer lending) to make them less innovative and competitive. As ever, the politicians need to be more introspective and consider the fact that it may be their own obsession with regulation and intervention that is the cause of the problem.
An earlier version of this article was published on ConservativeHome.
3 thoughts on “Memo to Ed Miliband – you cannot regulate your way to competition”
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Milliband it endeavouring to bring the debate into the open. Not always in a sense that might appeal to everyone but certainly in a way that deserves some attention.
Who could disagree with the contention that shareholders should bear the cost of failure? Who could disagree that competition has become severely impaired since the Bank of England encouraged bank mergers?
Why not allow all authorised deposit takers in the UK to have clearing status and why allow the existing Clearers the right to exclude them?
Perhaps a cap on banks is not the answer but perhaps limiting their size by requiring all growth to be organic might pave the way for some robust competition.
All things proposed by the Conservatives are not always right and all things proposed by the Socialists are not always wrong.
certainly this blog has never suggested that everything proposed by the Conservatives is right – far from it. I am not against this issue being opened up. A sensible suggestion could be made on competition grounds (though I don’t agree with it) to stop free banking which I am told is a significant barrier to entry. Anyway, I am interested in your suggestion and how clearers stop deposit takers clearing. Can you expand on that?
I’m not sure I can improve on the commentators on John Redwoods site so, to avoid plaguerarism I repeat below
There are about 150 UK incorporated, deposit taking banks, and about the same number EEA and non-EEA incorporated banks, licenced for deposits by the PRA (BoE). How many more do you want? However, they don’t all have “Clearing and Settlement” capabilities and reserve / securities accounts at the Central Bank. .
A much better idea would be actually separating the Payment, Settlement and Clearing system from the Casino Banks. Systemically Important Payment Systems (SIPS), needs to be separated and directly supervised by the currency relevant Central Bank. As a Central Banks is immune from any liquidity problem in its own currency, it is the lender of last resort that keeps the system moving at the speed of light. (Just like the US FED does as a SIPS). The Casino banks could then be regulated like any other Las Vagas type casino, or a UK Bookmaker, or a Bingo Hall.
For those who haven’t got a clue about Clearing, have a read of the BoE http://www.bankofengland.co.uk/publications/Documents/events/payments/settlement.pdf