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96 Foreign Aff. 54 (2017)
Are We Safe Yet: How to Manage Financial Crises

handle is hein.journals/fora96 and id is 68 raw text is: 




Are We Safe Yet?


How to Manage Financial Crises

Timothy R Geithner


T he 2008 financial crisis  was the most damaging economic event
        since the Great Depression,  for both the United  States
        and much of the global economy. Although the U.S. economy
emerged  from it more quickly and in better shape than many other
economies  did, the crisis imposed tragically high costs and left deep
economic and political scars. To help prevent another crisis, Congress
passed the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection
Act in 2010. These and other reforms have added a considerable margin
of safety to the U.S. financial system.
   But how safe is that system today? The answer is important, because
although the United States may not face a major crisis anytime soon, it
is certain to at some point. The choices policymakers make in advance
of that event and in the moment will have a major impact in determining
the magnitude  of the economic damage. Indeed, the U.S. financial
system's vulnerability to a crisis depends not only on the strength of the
regulation designed to prevent one but also on how much freedom
policymakers have to respond when prevention fails. It's just as in med-
icine, where the public's health depends not just on immunizations, nu-
trition, and checkups but also on hospitals, surgery, and emergency care.
   Determining whether  the system is now safer requires looking at
three different dimensions of the question. The first involves trying to
assess the underlying fragility of the system today. How much dry tinder,
so to speak, is there in terms of short-term liabilities, and how much
privately owned capital is available to absorb losses in an economic down-
turn? The second involves the ability to limit the intensity of a crisis.
How  much  fiscal capacity does the government have to cushion a fall

TIMOTHY F. GEITHNER is President of Warburg Pincus and was U.S. Treasury Secretary
from 2009 to 2013. This essay is adapted from his Per Jacobsson Lecture, which he delivered
at the 2016 Annual Meetings of the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank Group.


54   FOREIGN   AFFAIRS

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