Understanding the Shift from Micro to Macro-Prudential Thinking: A Discursive Network Analysis
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Date
2016-05-09
Author
Thiemann, Matthias
Aldegwy, Mohamed
Ibrocevic, Edin
SAFE No.
136
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Abstract
While some economists argued for macro-prudential regulation pre-crisis, the macro-prudential approach and its emphasis on endogenously created systemic risk have only gained prominence post-crisis. Employing discourse and network analysis on samples of the most cited scholarly works on banking regulation as well as on systemic risk (60 sources each) from 1985 to 2014, we analyze the shift from micro to macro-prudential thinking in the shift to the post crisis period. Our analysis demonstrates that the predominance of formalism, particularly, partial equilibrium analysis along with the exclusion of historical and practitioners’ styles of reasoning from banking regulatory studies impeded economists from engaging seriously with the endogenous sources of systemic risk prior to the crisis. Post-crisis, these topics became important in this discourse, but the epistemological failures of banking regulatory studies pre-crisis were not sufficiently recognized. Recent attempts to conceptualize and price systemic risk as a negative externality point to the persistence of formalism and equilibrium thinking, with its attending dangers of incremental innovation due to epistemological barriers constrains theoretical progress, by excluding observed phenomena, which cannot yet be accommodated in mathematical models.
Research Area
Macro Finance
Keywords
banking regulation, systemic risk, formalism, equilibrium thinking, discourse and citation network analysis
JEL Classification
B40, B41, G18, G28
Research Data
Topic
Stability and Regulation
Systematic Risk
Corporate Governance
Systematic Risk
Corporate Governance
Relations
1
Publication Type
Working Paper
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- LIF-SAFE Working Papers [334]