Crisis Prevention: The International Agenda - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Crisis Prevention: The International Agenda

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Title: Crisis Prevention: The International Agenda


1
Crisis Prevention The International Agenda
  • Jonathan T. Fried
  • Executive Director
  • Canada, Ireland and the Caribbean
  • International Monetary Fund

2
Outline
  • The Diagnosis Underlying Causes of Crisis
  • 2. The International Response
  • Surveillance
  • Asset and liability management
  • Bond market development
  • IMF facilities
  • Debt Relief
  • 3. Conclusion

3
The Diagnosis Underlying Causes of Crisis
  • Policy imbalances leading to financial
    vulnerabilities
  • Weak, poorly-regulated financial systems that
    concentrate risk
  • Institutional weakness in legal and accounting
    frameworks
  • Information asymmetries that contribute to
    uncertainty and invite panic responses to bad
    news

4
The International Response (I) Surveillance
  • Key service provided by the IMF
  • Aids in crisis prevention by
  • Assessing fundamental risks, both external and
    domestic, with a focus on macro-critical issues
  • Identifying weakness in prudential and regulatory
    frameworks
  • Promoting best practice through the use of
    Standards and Codes

5
Surveillance, continued
  • Experience shows surveillance could be improved
    by
  • Working to increase its candor and effectiveness
  • Increasing the focus on financial sector
  • More focus on macro-financial linkages
  • Greater focus on FSAPs and integrating financial
    sector analyses
  • Taking a more holistic look at exchange rates
  • Developing new models
  • Looking at them in from a multilateral
    perspective
  • Increasing disclosure of findings

6
The International Response (II) Asset -
Liability Management
  • Identifying and reducing asset-liability
    mismatches
  • Debt Management
  • Debt Sustainability Analyses (DSAs) Designed to
    identify vulnerabilities in public sector balance
    sheets resulting from fiscal and macroeconomic
    developments and shocks
  • Technical assistance

7
Asset - Liability Management, continued
  • Asset Management
  • Technical assistance in the design and management
    of wealth funds and reserve pooling arrangements
  • Advice on management of central bank reserves

8
The International Response (III) Developing
Local Financial Markets
  • Bond Markets
  • Original sin prevents sovereigns from borrowing
    long-term in their own currency and exposes them
    to risks
  • Deeper, more resilient domestic bond markets can
    reduce these risks
  • and can foster the development of deeper, more
    liquid domestic capital markets

9
Developing Local Financial Markets, continued
  • Area of major focus at present, requiring efforts
    along many dimensions
  • Rule of law
  • Stable macroeconomic environment
  • Technical expertise
  • Sound regulatory framework
  • Clearing and settlement systems
  • Sectoral regulations
  • Broadening investor base (e.g. facilitating
    investments by pension funds)
  • Transparency and international investor relations

10
The International Response (IV) The IMFs
Facilities
  • IMF as a lender of last resort
  • Its facilities SBA and SRF can help in
    liquidity crises, thereby having a deterrent
    effect on speculative attacks
  • In practice, it is difficult to distinguish
    liquidity from solvency crises
  • Precautionary SBAs and PSIs are currently the
    only pure crisis prevention facilities
  • Both are ill-suited for crisis prevention

11
The IMFs Facilities, continued
  • IMF currently working on a purely preventative
    facility to plug the gap
  • Considering a Reserve Augmentation Line that
    would provide large sums unconditionally to
    qualifying countries
  • Several important issues
  • Lender and borrower moral hazard
  • Entry/exit problem
  • Rate of charge

12
The International Response (V) Debt Relief
  • HIPC and MDRI can be viewed as forms of crisis
    prevention
  • Reducing the debt service burden creates space
    for growth enhancing expenditures
  • Better economic outcomes reduce the likelihood of
    crisis
  • There is a debate free-riders and
    non-concessional lending

13
Conclusion (I) Effective Surveillance is
Fundamental
  • Importance of surveillance hard to overstate
  • Ensures that countries are aware of flaws and
    vulnerabilities in their policy frameworks, and
    the likely source of shocks
  • Also ensures that markets have reliable
    information and analysis on the countries they
    invest in

14
Conclusion (II) Debt Management is Key
  • Published DSAs provide countries and markets with
    good frameworks for analyzing a countrys risk
    profile
  • Can lead countries to take corrective measures
    long before problems occur
  • Can also reduce speculative attacks in cases
    where vulnerabilities are low
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