The World Is
Defenseless Against The Next Financial Crisis, Warns BIS
July 02, 2015
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The
world will be unable to fight the next global financial crash as
central banks have used up their ammunition trying to tackle the last
crises, the Bank for International Settlements has warned.
The so-called central bank of central banks launched a scatching
critique of global monetary policy in its annual report. The BIS claimed
that central banks have backed themselves into a corner after
repeatedly cutting interest rates to shore up their economies.
These
low interest rates have in turn fuelled economic booms, encouraging
excessive risk taking. Booms have then turned to busts, which
policymakers have responded to with even lower rates.
Claudio Borio, head of the organisation’s monetary and economic
department, said: “Persistent exceptionally low rates reflect the
central banks’ and market participants’ response to the unusually weak
post-crisis recovery as they fumble in the dark in search of new
certainties.”
“Rather than just reflecting the current weakness, they may in part have contributed to it by fuelling costly financial booms and busts and delaying adjustment. The result is too much debt, too little growth and too low interest rates.
“Rather than just reflecting the current weakness, they may in part have contributed to it by fuelling costly financial booms and busts and delaying adjustment. The result is too much debt, too little growth and too low interest rates.
"In short, low rates beget lower rates."
The BIS warned that interest rates have now been so low for so long that central banks are unequipped to fight the next crises.
“In
some jurisdictions, monetary policy is already testing its outer
limits, to the point of stretching the boundaries of the unthinkable,”
the BIS said.
Policymakers
in the eurozone, Denmark, Sweden and Switzerland have taken their
interest rates below zero in an attempt to support their economies,
contributing to a decline in bond yields.
Extraordinarily low interest rates are not a “new equilibrium” said Jaime Caruana, general manager of the BIS, rejecting the theory of so-called “secular stagnation” which some economists blame for the continued decline in global lending rates.
Extraordinarily low interest rates are not a “new equilibrium” said Jaime Caruana, general manager of the BIS, rejecting the theory of so-called “secular stagnation” which some economists blame for the continued decline in global lending rates.
“True,
there may be secular forces that put downward pressure on equilibrium
interest rates … [but] we argue that the current configuration of very
low rates is neither inevitable, nor does it represent a new
equilibrium,” he said.
Mr
Caruana said that interest rate hikes “should be welcomed”, as global
economies have started to grow at close to their historical averages,
and a slump in oil prices has provided the global economy with a boost.
The
BIS report described the threat of a new bust in advanced economies as a
“main risk”, with many reaching the top of the economic cycle.
The
economies worst hit by the last crisis are now suffering the costs of
persistent ultra-low rates, the organisation said, which could “inflict
serious damage on the financial system”, sapping banks and weakening
their balance sheets and their ability to lend.
And
the continued misallocation of resources during busts prompted by
central banks’s rock-bottom interest rates has also hammered
productivity growth, the BIS said, as a prolonged reliance on debt had
been used in its place.
This
problem is compounded as the world’s populations continue to age, the
organisation warned, making debt burdens harder to bear. Yet politicians
have relied too much on temporary growth boosts by using debt, rather
than making painful choices, said the
BIS.
Mr
Caruana said that during booms, workers and capital are shifted to
slow-growing sectors, with a “long-lasting negative” impact on
productivity growth. “Misallocated labour needs to move from these
sectors to other parts of the economy,” he said.
The
BIS said that the current turmoil in Greece typified the kind of “toxic
mix” of private and public debt being used as a solution to economic
problems, rather than making the proper commitment “to badly needed”
structural reforms.
Mr
Caruana said that policymakers must now focus on the supply side of the
economy, introducing the right reforms, rather than continue to lean on
debt which will inevitably undermine growth.
Read more at http://www.prophecynewswatch.com/2015/July02/022.html#JRLFbjc2ohfvrA0H.99
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