Former RBNZ Governor: A decade of high debt and loose money comes home to roost
26
October, 2018
Alan
Bollard joins the line up of ex-central bankers sounding warnings
about “loose money” that occured on their watch. We’ve heard
“warnings” from Greenspan and Bernanke in the USA in recent
years. And former UK prime minister and chancellor of the exchequer
Gordon Brown just last month warned
we were sleepwalking into a crisis.
Now
Bollard says:
“It
may be that some future economic risks are not yet fully priced into
markets. Already there have been significant swings in exchange rates
as the US reserve currency strengthens and some third countries are
considering erecting new tariff structures themselves.
Apec
finance ministers are convening to address these issues, including
growth prospects and how to make tax policies, financing and
economies more effective and inclusive. But now, as they prepare
their advice for the region’s leaders, including Prime Minister
Jacinda Ardern, to meet here in November, there is another issue on
the agenda – new economic and financial risks.
Since
the global financial crisis, financial sector debt has decreased
appropriately, but cheap credit has brought mounting debt in the
private sector and state-owned enterprises in emerging markets.
Deteriorating local currencies and tightening international monetary
policy could make it difficult to service some of this debt. Tariff
increases causing domestic inflation would worsen policy options.
Ten years ago, we saw how badly managed financial risk could hurt the world’s economies. A decade later, we do not want to see how badly managed economic risk could trigger another financial crisis.”
'The world is sleepwalking into a financial crisis' – Gordon Brown
Former
PM delivers scathing analysis of how the problems of 2009 remain
unresolved
A
leaderless world is sleepwalking towards a repeat of its near
meltdown in late 2008 and early 2009 because it has failed to remedy
the causes of the financial crash of a decade ago, former prime
minister Gordon Brown has warned.
Britain’s
leader during the period when the collapse of the US investment bank
Lehman Brothers put every major bank at risk, said that after a
decade of stagnation the global economy was now moving into a decade
of vulnerability.....
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.