The fundamental flaw at the heart of Switzerland's revolutionary referendum on banking
Switzerland
Switzerland
  • Martin Brown, a professor of banking at the University of St. Gallen, and former economist at the Swiss National Bank, explains the fatal flaw in the logic of Switzerland's banking reform referendum.

  • "Most academic economists are very sceptical, not just about this vote, but about the whole campaign for monetary reform which goes in the direction of sovereign money," Brown told Business Insider.

  • Swiss citizens will this weekend vote on an initiative called Vollgeld.

  • The initiative essentially boils down to moving consumer deposits off the balance sheets of high street banks, and holding them instead with the Swiss National Bank (SNB), Switzerland's central bank.



LONDON — A Swiss referendum to overhaul the country's financial system misunderstands how banks fail and won't make them safer, according to a leading academic.

On Sunday, a referendum will be held asking Swiss citizens if they back the introduction of a concept known as the sovereign money initiative, proposed by a group called the Vollgeld Initiative.

Martin Brown, a professor of banking at the University of St. Gallen, said: "Most academic economists are very sceptical, not just about this vote, but about the whole campaign for monetary reform which goes in the direction of sovereign money," in a phone interview.

But first, what is the Vollgeld Initiative? It boils down to moving consumer deposits off the balance sheets of high street banks, and holding them instead with the Swiss National Bank (SNB), Switzerland's central bank.

In simple terms, Brown describes the referendum as being like using a safety deposit box in a bank to store your cash.

"Suppose you were to take all your cash and store it in a safety deposit box in a bank. The bank would be managing that for you, but it wouldn't be on the bank's balance sheet, it would be cash — which is a claim against the central bank," he said.

"What sovereign money would do is basically the electronic version of that."

Campaigners for the initiative say that implementing this change would make the financial system safer. As Brown explained: "The idea is that if you take demand deposits off the balance sheet of a bank, and have them as direct claims on the central bank, then those deposits will be safer."

"And then because households and firms think they're safer, there will be fewer bank runs, and the financial system will be more stable."

This, however, is a fallacy, Brown told Business Insider over the phone, because it is simply not how financial crashes actually tend to start.