¶ … Independent Commission's recommendations satisfy many of the criteria specified in the Saunders-Walter paper. However, many others are not satisfied, and many people feel as though any fix based on the IC recommendations would only represent a partial fix. This is precisely where the recommendations will eventually fail the UK banking sector completely and will not allow for the complete isolation of the individual retail banking customers from the downside risk associated with commercial and investment banking.
First of all, the IC recommendations call for structural separation of the retail banks from the investment and commercial banking sectors (ICB, 2011). This should help to isolate these retail banks from potential financial crisis or collapse if the commercial or investment banking sectors fail or crash themselves. Tis is similar to what the U.S. did after 1933 when they isolated the commercial and private banking sectors to insulate them from financial ruin. Europe on the other hand did not follow suit in the 1930's, and were left with a much more universal banking architecture. This has made them much more vulnerable to systemic shocks than the U.S. system used to be. However, in the 1980's, the U.S. system became much more like the European system after the repeal of the Glass-Steagall Act.
Secondly, the IC recommendations show that the retail banks should be put on the outer rings or fringe of the banking system, which means they are not totally separated from investment or commercial banks but they do not have the same responsibilities in terms of bearing the risk for the public the way that U.S. taxpayers bear risk for commercial and investment banking actions through the potential for bailout money due to the "too big to fail" status (ICB, 2011). In helping to create a buffer between retail and investment banks, the IC report recommended that the retail banks keep a 17-20% primary loss absorption buffer. This means that they will capitalize themselves adequately...
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