China is trying hard to hold up its stock market. REUTERS/Jason Reed

China's stock market regulator said it would extend a six-month ban on stock sales by large shareholders.

The ban had been set to expire this week, prompting panic on Monday and a 7% tumble in China's blue-chip stock index, the CSI 300.

Under the rules, shareholders who own more than 5% of a company's stock are barred from selling those shares.

Markets have responded well, and the Shanghai Composite Index has rallied 1.8% with less than an hour of trading to go.

While it may work in the short term, however, intervening in markets to this extent isn't sustainable.

It's a bit like banning short selling, which is the practice of borrowing stocks with the intention of selling them off in hopes of buying them back at a lower price later to pocket the difference.

Usually this gets banned during a crisis, because regulators assume the negative bets put downward pressure on stock prices.

The US, along with most of the world, tried a short-selling ban in 2008, when the stock market was melting down. Europe followed with a short ban on some credit derivatives and bank shares as its sovereign-debt crisis exploded in 2010 and 2011.

Studies of these bans show that while they can inflate some prices briefly, they can't hold up the whole market.

Here's a chart from the New York Fed showing what happened in 2008:

Policymakers like quick bans because they can seen to be actively addressing problems in the market. But these kinds of emergency rules are counterproductive.

They result in lower market liquidity, damaged investor confidence, and higher trading costs.

Here's a graph from a 2011 academic paper that shows the difference in bid-offer spreads between Australian stocks that had a short-selling ban imposed and the same stocks in Canada, which didn't have a ban.

The measure is used to calculate how easy it is for buyers and sellers to interact in a market. The higher it is, the harder it is to trade and the less liquid the market is. The blue line represents the stocks with the ban in place, and it stays higher even after the ban is lifted.

Uwe Helmes, Julia Henker and Thomas Henker A bid-offer spread is the difference in price between what the highest bidder will buy at and what the lowest seller will sell at.

If the spread is wide, it indicates that the market is illiquid, making it harder for buyers and sellers to find others willing to do a deal at the price they want.

By banning big sellers, China is doing something similar. By restricting the supply of stocks on to the market it reduces liquidity, which can lead to bigger and more volatile swings in price, and bigger losses.