The Theory of Optimum Financial Areas: Retooling the Debate on the Governance of Global Finance

Saturday, April 16, 2016
Assembly F (DoubleTree by Hilton Philadelphia Center City)
Geoffrey Underhill , Department of Political Science, Amsterdam Institute for Social Science Research
This joint article with Erik Jones examines the institutional preconditions for stable financial integration in a 'theory of optimal financial areas' (OFA).  This theory asks what makes for financial stability under conditions of market integration.  The article proposes six 'criteria' that should be met in order to stabilize an integrated financial ‘market geography’.  Three of these criteria relate to the technical substructure of markets, and include a shared risk free asset, centralized sovereign debt management, and common market infrastructures for communication, clearing, settlement and depository.  Three further criteria focus on the macro-prudential considerations like shared rules for financial supervision, centralized lender of last resort facilities for private- and public-sector market participants, and common provision for the resolution of failed private- and public-sector borrowers.  These criteria are controversial both individually and as an interdependent package.  Nevertheless, they are important to mitigate the costly dynamics of financial market disintegration under crisis conditions.  We use case studies of Great Britain, the United States and Canada to show how national governments have stumbled toward a similar set of arrangements to stabilize domestic financial market integration.  The more recent experience of the European Union shows this pattern applies across countries as well.  We conclude with a research agenda based on these considerations.
Paper
  • SWIFT Institute Working Paper No 2013-001 - Theory of Optimum Financial Areas FINAL.pdf (439.6 kB)