FINANCIAL SECTOR

    Cards (19)

    • Financial markets

      Where buyers and sellers can buy and trade a range of services or assets that are fundamentally monetary in nature
    • Reasons financial markets exist
      • To meet the demand for services, such as saving and borrowing, from individuals, businesses and the government
      • To allow speculation and financial gains
    • Role of the financial market
      1. Facilitate savings
      2. Lend to businesses and individuals
      3. Facilitate the exchange of goods and services
      4. Provide forward markets
      5. Provide a market for equities
    • The combination of speculation and provision of genuine services means that financial markets are prone to regular crises that cause significant damage to the real economy
    • Asymmetric information

      Financial institutions often have more knowledge compared to their customers, both consumers and other institutions
    • The Global Financial Crisis was partially caused by banks selling packages of prime and subprime mortgages, but advertising them as all prime mortgages
    • There are a number of costs placed on firms, individuals and the government that the financial market does not pay
    • The long-term cost to the economy of the 2007-8 financial crisis due to its effects on demand and growth was even higher than the cost of bailing out the banks
    • Moral hazard
      Individuals make decisions in their own best interests knowing there are potential risks
    • The Global Financial Crisis was caused by moral hazard, when employees sold mortgages to those who would not be unable to pay them back
    • Speculation and market bubbles
      Almost all trading in financial markets is speculative and this leads to the creation of market bubbles, where the price of a particular assets rises massively and then falls
    • The financial market has also caused market bubbles in the housing market by lending too much in mortgages and increasing demand for houses
    • Other bubbles included the dot com bubble in the 1990s and the Wall Street Crash in 1929
    • Market rigging
      A group of individuals or institutions collude to fix prices or exchange information that will lead to gains for themselves at the expense of other participants in the market
    • In the Libor scandal of 2008, financial institutions were accused of fixing the London Interbank Lending Rate (LIBOR), one of the most important rates in the world
    • Role of the central bank
      1. Controls monetary policy through interest rates and controlling money supply
      2. Acts as a banker to the government
      3. Acts as a bank to other banks
      4. Regulates the financial system
    • Central bank's role as a bank to other banks
      • Banks deposit their money within the central bank and this is often used to balance the accounts of banks at the end of each day
      • The most important part of this role is the fact they are a lender of last resort
    • Key bodies for financial regulation
      • FPC (identifies and reduces system risk and supports government economic policy)
      • PRA (ensures competition, ensures consumers have access to services, minimises risk should a bank fail and ensures banks take responsible action)
      • FCA (protects consumers, promotes competition and enhances the integrity of the system by preventing market rigging)
    • Fiscal policy is used when there are fluctuations in economic activity such as recessions or booms