20
Feb
“Too Big to Fail”

The phrase “to big to fail” has been bandied around a lot over the last 12 months; specifically in regard to the (assumed to be unacceptable) cost to society of the failure of large banks and now to large manufacturing businesses such as General Motors and Chrysler.

There is no doubt that the failure of both large banks and manufacturers would cause significant immediate pain to both the local and global economies not just directly but through the knock on effects on confidence (particularly important in banks) and the supply chain in the case of car manufacturers (the usual figure quoted is 6 component manufacturing jobs for each car assembly job). There is also the likely long term damage to the manufacturing skills base (ref the UK in the 1980’s).

Politically this is dynamite as people expect government to help in these situations. The latest approach from GM and Chrysler to the Obama administration is the latest and clearest example of this.  What interests me is what happens next.

If these businesses are “too big to fail” then it seems to me that there are two options for society going forwards to ensure this does not happen again. Either:

  1. These businesses need to be broken up into chunks that are small enough so that their failure does not wreck the socio-economic system.  Competition / M&A policy also needs to be tightened up significantly to include a “will this acquisition / merger create a business that is too big to fail?” (note this should not include any assessment of the risk of it failing)
  2. If they can’t (or shouldn’t) be broken up then society needs to make sure, as best as possible, that the organisation can’t fail.  This is what has happened in the case of the banks through both implicit and explicit guarantees and significant equity investment.  In return for these guarantees the organisations will, in future, have to be run with “society” as a (possibly the) major stakeholder.  In effect they will have to become like the utility companies where their detailed business plans are vetted by a regulator operating on behalf of society.

What this means for politics is the return of some sort of “planned economy” to the US and the UK in particular (it never really went away in France and Germany).  The major problem with this is that there there are very few politicians that have any experience of industry.

A new socio economic system is emerging, which is neither capitalism as we have known it, or socialism as it was practiced before.  More on this in the next post!

“Too Big to Fail”
Category : Governance / News Comment