Credit Suisse Rescue
The
Swiss National Bank is facing calls for an overhaul in its governance,
with critics saying too much power lies in the hands of its chairman
Thomas Jordan and that more transparency is needed.
The SNB played a major role in the state-sponsored rescue of Credit Suisse (CSGN.S) making 250 billion Swiss francs ($280 billion) of liquidity available to ease its takeover by UBS (UBSG.S).
In the wider economy, its monetary policy has led to it building up a balance sheet of nearly 900 billion Swiss francs – equivalent to 113% of Swiss economic output.
All
that has raised concerns about the concentration of power in the SNB’s
three-person governing board overseen by Jordan, smaller than the
policy-making teams of other major central banks and one which retains a
high level of discretion over its decision-making process.
Jordan,
who has led the board since 2012, has stamped his authority on the
central bank during a period where it has upended currency markets by
scrapping the Swiss franc’s peg, and introduced the world’s lowest
interest rates before joining others in tightening policy as
inflationary pressures grew.
The
governance concerns have been brought centre-stage by the search for a
new member to replace Andrea Maechler, the first woman to serve on the
SNB’s governing board.
She leaves at the end of June and calls are emerging for her to be succeeded by an independent, female candidate.
“With
the current composition of the governing board of the Swiss National
Bank I am worried there is a strong concentration of power in very few
hands and a too powerful role of the chairman,” Celine Widmer, an MP for
the left-leaning Social Democrats who has raised questions about the
selection process to replace Maechler, told Reuters.
Widmer
also advocated the expansion of the governing council from three
members to five or seven and noted more generally there had been a “lack
of questioning” about the role of the SNB in the rescue of Credit
Suisse and what role it will play in banking regulation in future.
Her views were echoed by members of other parties.
“Probably
extending the governing council from three to five members is a good
idea,” said Christian Luscher, an MP the centre right Free Liberals, a
former president of parliament’s economy committee, who said the matter
should be considered.
Green
Party MP Gerhard Andrey, a current member of parliament’s finance
committee, said the SNB’s current structure was not “much different than
it was 100 years ago.”
“Although
the SNB has done a pretty good job to stabilize prices and
inflation..it needs to evolve and have more diversity to tackle the
upcoming challenges,” said Andrey.
The Swiss parliament would have to approve any expansion of the SNB’s board.
CLOSED DOORS
While
past ECB chiefs like Mario Draghi have faced criticism for forcing
through their views, current boss Christine Lagarde has said her role is
to forge consensus among the euro zone’s 26 policy-makers.
ECB
presidents regularly go before the European Parliament to explain the
bank’s policies and published accounts of its internal discussions
acknowledge when there have been disagreements, albeit without naming
policymakers.
The
Bank of England also publishes detailed minutes of its monetary policy
discussions and reveals the spread of views on rate decisions. Its
policy-makers face sometimes aggressive questioning by parliamentary
committees.
Although
the SNB meets regularly with government ministers and committees, this
takes place behind closed doors and the bank does not publish minutes of
its decisions.
The bank, which holds its shareholders meeting on Friday, said it saw “no advantage” in expanding its governing council.
“From
the SNB’s point of view, this organizational form has proven its worth,
promoting intensive and efficient discussions with rapid
decision-making,” the SNB said.
Still,
the SNB Observatory, a group of economists set up to stimulate a debate
about the SNB, has suggested that the small committee meant the central
bank was susceptible to group think.
Yvan
Lengwiler, from the University of Basel, said too many SNB officials
spent their entire careers at the central bank, a particular risk in the
cases of Jordan and his deputy Martin Schlegel who have been there all
their working lives.
“They
are both highly competent, but it is a bubble, they have no outside
experience,” Lengwiler said. “There really needs to be term limits.”
Such
views are not shared universally. Thomas Stucki, a former head of asset
management at the SNB, said it was typical for central bank chairmen to
dominate decision-making.
“There
is no doubt that Thomas Jordan is a strong personality, but he is the
chairman, the one who carries the can for the SNB’s decisions,” said
Stucki, who is now chief investment officer at St Galler Kantonalbank.
His
views were echoed by Hannes Germann, an MP with the right-wing Swiss
People’s Party, who saw no reason for an overhaul. He argued some of the
reforms being aired could backfire, making the bank more susceptible to
outside influence and less efficient in maintaining price stability.
“An
expansion of the board contains the risk of less independence of the
board versus politics,” he said. “Less independent central banks usually
lead to higher inflation rates in the long run.”
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