Everybody with money in a bank in this country will be alarmed at first reading of the Reserve Bank's plan to seize some depositors' funds in the event of its failure. Events in Cyprus - where eurozone ministers are forcing Cypriot savers to share the cost of the country's bailout - have been a reminder that money in banks is not sacrosanct, no matter what depositors believe.
What depositors believe, with good reason, is that banks are too big to fail and that governments will always come to their rescue. The global financial crisis reinforced that impression almost everywhere. Even here, where the major banks remained sound, the Government hurriedly installed a deposit guarantee scheme to remove any risk to the system.
In the wake of the crisis, banking regulators in many countries have been worrying about comfort they have given to financial institutions. Banks that know they are "too big to fail" may drift back into the reckless and careless behaviour that contributed to the crisis. New Zealand's regulator, the Reserve Bank, is proposing a novel answer.
Its policy would mean no bank is too big to fail but with depositors' funds it could be quickly recapitalised. Insolvency would be met with an "open bank resolution" by the Minister of Finance that would give a statutory manager power to confiscate enough from the bank's deposits to cover its liabilities. To avoid a run on remaining deposits the Government would probably guarantee them and, all going to plan, the bank could reopen on the next trading day.
Its shareholders' funds would be wiped out, as in any company failure, and depositors with more than a small amount in the bank, possibly $20,000, would take a "haircut". Their loss might be converted to shares in the rehabilitated bank, though that would be cold comfort to people who do not think of bank deposits as an investment in the institution, even while it is paying them interest and using their funds.