Elimination of systemic risk in financial networks by means of a systemic risk transaction tax
Authored by Stefan Thurner, Sebastian Poledna
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.1080/14697688.2016.1156146
Sponsors:
European Union
Platforms:
MATLAB
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Financial markets are exposed to systemic risk (SR), the risk that a
major fraction of the system ceases to function, and collapses. It has
recently become possible to quantify SR in terms of underlying financial
networks where nodes represent financial institutions, and links capture
the size and maturity of assets (loans), liabilities and other
obligations, such as derivatives. We demonstrate that it is possible to
quantify the share of SR that individual liabilities within a financial
network contribute to the overall SR. We use empirical data of
nationwide interbank liabilities to show that the marginal contribution
to overall SR of liabilities for a given size varies by a factor of a
thousand. We propose a tax on individual transactions that is
proportional to their marginal contribution to overall SR. If a
transaction does not increase SR, it is tax-free. With an agent-based
model (ABM) (CRISIS macro-financial model), we demonstrate that the
proposed `Systemic Risk Tax' (SRT) leads to a self-organized
restructuring of financial networks that are practically free of SR. The
SRT can be seen as an insurance for the public against costs arising
from cascading failure. ABM predictions are shown to be in remarkable
agreement with the empirical data and can be used to understand the
relation of credit risk and SR.
Tags
Market
Model
Contagion
topology
Credit
Economy