Could Good Intentions Backfire? An Empirical Analysis of the Bank Deposit Insurance

Citation
Bao, Weining et Ni, Jian, Could Good Intentions Backfire? An Empirical Analysis of the Bank Deposit Insurance, Marketing science , 36(2), 2017, pp. 301-319
Journal title
ISSN journal
07322399
Volume
36
Issue
2
Year of publication
2017
Pages
301 - 319
Database
ACNP
SICI code
Abstract
The recent financial crisis led to the expansion of deposit-insurance coverage in many countries. We develop a structural model of the banking market in which banks act as financial intermediaries between consumers who have funds and businesses that seek loans, and explore the implications of such policies for banks and depositors. Our results indicate the policy could erode market discipline and increase banks' moral hazard. As a result, banks extend their lending to riskier loans than they would have in the absence of the policy. We find this policy may even harm consumers. Moreover, market competition magnifies the lack of market discipline and induces additional moral hazard for excessive risk taking. Counterfactuals indicate banks may reduce their deposit interest rates by 2.7% in a duopoly market and almost triple their risk caps under the new policy. The estimated losses of depositors' welfare are equivalent to at least a 3.27% drop in deposit interest rates.