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RBNZ reform could bring in deposit insurance

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 Reserve Bank Governor Adrian Orr is actively pursuing debt-to-income restrictions as part of Grant Robertson's review of the Reserve Bank Act. Reserve Bank Governor Adrian Orr is actively pursuing debt-to-income restrictions as part of Grant Robertson's review of the Reserve Bank Act. Photo: Lynn Grieveson

New Zealand may finally implement deposit protection as part of a review of the Reserve Bank.  New Zealand is currently the only country in the OECD without any kind of deposit insurance reports Thomas Coughlan for Newsroom.

This means that if a bank fails depositors have no protection and the Reserve Bank could give savers 'haircuts' to help recapitalise a failing bank. That means savers deposits would be cut arbitrarily by the Reserve Bank to ensure the bank could reopen.

A temporary deposit protection scheme was established during the financial crisis to give spooked depositors confidence in the banking sector, but it lapsed in 2010.

Then-Reserve Bank Governor Alan Bollard said at the time that “in the absence of a Government guarantee, it is vital that depositors understand the risks and the potential trade-off between risk and return”.