Systemic Risk, Interbank Relations, and Liquidity Provision by the Central Bank

Authors

Freixas, Xavier; Parigi, Bruno M.; Rochet, Jean-Charles

Type

Book Chapters

Book Authors

Goodhart, C. A. E. (ed.); Illing, Gerhard (ed.)

Book title

Financial crises, contagion, and the lender of last resort: a reader

Publisher

Oxford University Press

Publication year

2002

Pages

-

ISBN

978-0-19-924720-2

Abstract

We model systemic risk in an interbank market. Banks face liquidity needs as consumers are uncertain about where they need to consume. Interbank credit lines allow to cope with these liquidity shocks while reducing the cost of maintaining reserves. However, the interbank market exposes the system to a coordination failure (gridlock equilibrium) even if all banks are solvent. When one bank is insolvent, the stability of the banking system is affected in various ways depending on the patterns of payments across locations. We investigate the ability of the banking system to withstand the insolvency of one bank and whether the closure of one bank generates a chain reaction on the rest of the system. We analyze the coordinating role of the Central Bank in preventing payments systemic repercussions and we examine the justification of the Too-big-to-fail-policy

Complete citation

Freixas, Xavier; Parigi, Bruno M.; Rochet, Jean-Charles. Systemic Risk, Interbank Relations, and Liquidity Provision by the Central Bank. In: Goodhart, C. A. E. (ed.); Illing, Gerhard (ed.). Financial crises, contagion, and the lender of last resort: a reader. 1 ed. Oxford University Press; 2002.

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