The United States and global markets alike are still plagued by the
threat of financial institutions that are "too big to fail," Gary
Stern, former president of the Minneapolis Federal Reserve Bank, told
CNBC on Monday.
"We still have a 'too big to fail' problem," he
said, referring to the theory that some financial institutions are so
large that their collapse could send shock waves through the economy.
But Stern told "Closing Bell"
that some of the steps taken by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. and
the Federal Reserve have resulted in progress. For example, he said,
the implementation of the so-called living will, or recovery and
resolution plan, is a move toward increased transparency.
(Read more: Bank crackdown actually ups risk: Bove)
"I think if that is done well ... if the regulators insist that it be
done well and they get bank board of directors involved, we can rein
in—not eliminate—but rein in too big to fail, diminish the scale of the
problem, reduce the probability of severe financial crises," Stern said.
Economist
Simon Johnson, speaking at the American Economic Association's annual
meeting in Philadelphia this weekend, countered that the living will
does not provide enough transparency, for instance, about which pension
funds or global money market funds are exposed to a troubled bank.
Stern agreed with that assertion but said it's a good start.
"We've got to pay attention to who the counterparties are, who has the
exposure, which markets do these institutions rely on for funding and
so forth," he said. "Those are issues that require a fair amount of
resources to really get your arms around. But it's not impossible, and I
think good process is being made."
—By CNBC's Drew Sandholm
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