Fiscal consolidation, financial sector reform are what’s needed now: BIS |
Date: Tuesday, June 29, 2010
Author: Investment Executive
Deficit reduction and financial reform are both needed to
ensure the stability of the financial system, the Bank for
International Settlements said at its annual meeting in Basel,
Switzerland.
Speaking at the meeting on Monday, BIS general
manager, Jaime Caruana, outlined three primary policy challenges facing
governments: deficit reduction; getting international agreement on
financial reform; and improving the balance sheets and the behaviour of
financial firms.
Caruana said that strengthening balance sheets
in the financial sector is the precondition for restoring financial
stability and scaling back public sector involvement. “Banks have raised
new equity capital, but some are still not well positioned to absorb
the losses and risks that may lie ahead. In addition, some banks have
yet to make transparent the scale of losses already on their balance
sheets, and remain too dependent on very short-term borrowing,” he said.
At
the same time, a safer, more resilient financial system requires a
coherent global financial stability framework, he said.
“We need
more and better capital and liquidity buffers to make banks
substantially more resilient. We must also reduce the moral hazard
associated with the too-big-to-fail issue. And the systemic dimension of
financial risk needs to become tightly woven into the new regulatory
and supervisory fabric,” he said.
He noted that the Basel
Committee is well on the way to reforming capital, liquidity and
leverage, and that, according to preliminary estimates, the impact on
global output as these reforms are phased in “is likely to be small and
transitory”.
Finally, he said that the role of monetary and
fiscal policy in ensuring financial stability must be recognized.
“Unsustainably high fiscal deficits can quickly destabilize financial
markets. And long periods of extremely low policy rates give rise to
financial stability risks,” he said. “This means that, in order to play
their financial stability roles effectively, central banks need
realistic financial stability objectives and effective tools that are
consistent with their monetary policy responsibilities.”
Christian
Noyer, BIS chairman and governor of the Bank of France, said that, “The
main task of the public sector now is to design policies that minimize
the risks of future financial crises and promote sustainable growth. In
this regard, international cooperation will continue to be essential.”