Title: APEC Policy Dialogue on Deposit Insurance: Key Policy Conclusions
1APEC Policy Dialogue onDeposit Insurance Key
Policy Conclusions
Presented to International Association of
Deposit Insurers Third Annual Conference
Brunnen, Switzerland October 26-27, 2004
Presented by David K. Walker Director, Policy
and Interational Canada Deposit Insurance
Corporation
2APEC Policy Dialogue on Deposit Insurance
- Held in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia in February,2004
- Chaired by the Canada Deposit Insurance
Corporation - Hosted by Bank Negara Malaysia.
- Held back-to-back with the APEC Policy Dialogue
on Financial Disclosure (Chile and New Zealand). - Attended by 61 participants from 16 APEC
economies, other countries and international
organizations.
3Major issues addressed
- Legal Protection and Indemnification
- 2. Governance and Interrelationship Management
- 3. Trigger Mechanisms for Prompt Corrective
Action
4Legal protection and indemnification
- A. Current situation and implications
- In some economies individuals working for deposit
insurers and other safety net organizations are
held personally liable for their decisions taken
in the normal discharge of their
responsibilities. - Work by CDIC, the IMF and World Bank show legal
protection is lacking in many countries. - This can result in
- reduced incentives for diligence
- costly delays when dealing with troubled banks
and resolving failed banks and - erode credibility, independence and integrity of
the deposit insurer and other safety net
participants.
5Legal protection and indemnification
B. Main conclusions
- Individuals should be protected against legal
liability for their decisions, actions or
omissions taken in good faith. -
- Legal protection should be codified in
legislation and administrative procedures, and
under appropriate circumstances, cover legal
costs for those indemnified. - But, protection must coexist in an environment
where there is clear accountability. - Secrecy and confidentiality provisions need to be
in place.
6Governance and interrelationship management
A. Importance of good governance
- Sound governance of organizations comprising the
safety net strengthens the financial system and
contributes directly to stability. - The four major elements comprising sound
governance of organizations are - Independence
- Accountability
- Transparency and
- Integrity.
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7Governance and interrelationship management
- Key policy conclusions
- Operationally independent and accountable safety
net organizations provide greater integrity,
credibility and legitimacy than entities lacking
such independence - Separate, operationally independent and
accountable deposit insurance entity working
within the financial safety net is the best
practice model available to provide - the most effective incentives for the control of
moral hazard affecting a deposit insurer - the greatest protection of the interests of
depositors - more balanced and effective decision-making and
- promotes more extensive monitoring of potential
conflicts than entities lacking such
independence.
8Governance and interrelationship management
- Accountability --- reinforces independence by
providing legitimacy. - Transparency -- safeguards independence and
enhances accountability. - Integrity -- ensures individual behavior or self
interest does not compromise the pursuit of
organizational goals and objectives. - integrity is required at all organizational
levels and - implies individuals working for the safety-net
organization receive legal protection.
9Governance and interrelationship management
B. Interrelationship management is critical
- Information sharing among all safety-net
participants is essential. Information should be
timely, accurate and relevant with due respect
given to confidentiality when required. - Formal information sharing arrangements are
necessary. - Clear mandates and the division of powers and
responsibilities among organizations support
coordination as do formal agreements.
10Trigger mechanisms for prompt corrective action
A. Institutional arrangements
- Ensuring that a framework exists for prompt
corrective action and resolution of troubled
banks can reduce the costs to depositors, the
deposit insurer and contribute to financial
system stability. -
- Institutional arrangements for prompt corrective
action need to ensure that the safety net
participants involved have - clearly defined mandates, roles and
responsibilities - the framework is well defined, transparent and
understood and - sound information sharing and coordination
arrangements exist. - The framework needs to be supported by strong
regulation and supervision, sound accounting and
disclosure regimes, and an effective legal
system.
11Trigger mechanisms for prompt corrective action
B. Trigger mechanisms
- When dealing with troubled banks, a balance needs
to be struck between adopting a purely
rules-based or discretionary approach. -
- The determination and recognition of when a bank
is or is expected to be in serious financial
difficulty should be made early and on the basis
of well defined and transparent trigger
mechanisms. -
- Effective trigger mechanism should include a
variety of relevant indicators -- not just
capital. Examples include - Deterioration in the quality of assets or
earnings - Serious deficiencies in quality of management
- Other concerns such as serious liquidity
problems, rapid loan growth, non-compliance with
regulations etc.
12 - Results and lessons learned
- Score of 4.7 out of 5 from participants and
speakers for overall effectiveness of the
dialogue - Topics considered highly relevant and timely by
participants - Key conclusions tabled at the September 1-3, 2004
APEC Finance Minister's meeting in Santiago,
Chile. - More work needs to be done to enhance legal
protection, strengthen governance and promote the
use of more effective trigger mechanisms for
prompt corrective action.