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Did An Obscure IMF Document Start A Global Bail-In Revolution? by Daniel Amerman

Did An Obscure IMF Document Start A Global Bail-In Revolution? by Daniel Amerman.

When revolutions start, it’s not uncommon for almost nobody to notice. It may take years or even decades before historians can look back, point a finger and say “that’s where it really began.”

An obscure International Monetary Fund “Staff Discussion Note” may have already started a “Bail-In” financial revolution that could transform the global investment world.

In this quite remarkable document, the staff discusses a world where risks to the global financial system have not gone away – but are worse than ever. As candidly discussed, the “SIFI” (systemically important financial institution) problem has not been improving, but instead has been getting worse than ever – and there doesn’t appear to be any solution under existing contract law and bankruptcy law.

More risk than ever is concentrated in fewer financial institutions, while there is no way under existing law to unwind a failure of one of these institutions without risking triggering global financial chaos. Moreover, there is a deadly feedback loop between these “too-big-to-fail” institutions and sovereign governments. That is, as the IMF staff discusses, the bailing out of these massive institutions can bankrupt sovereign governments, and sovereign governments going bankrupt can wipe out the “too-big-to-fail” institutions.

So the IMF staff has come up with an audacious plan for how the globe can emerge from this seemingly impossible situation. The key word is “insurance”.

 

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