The Asian Age

IMF flags financial stability

Cites trade tensions as reason Global markets still remain buoyant

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Washington, Oct. 10: The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund ( IMF) on Wednesday warned that global growth may be significan­tly harmed with further escalation of trade tension, which is a result of the uneven global economic recovery that has fuelled inward- looking policies and contribute­d to increased policy uncertaint­y.

A decade since the economic crisis, while there has been an undeniable progress towards a safer global financial system, clouds appear on the horizon, the IMF said in its latest fiscal stability report.

“The global economic recovery has been uneven and inequality has risen, fuelling inwardlook­ing policies and contributi­ng to increased policy uncertaint­y. Trade tensions have emerged, and a further escalation may damage market sentiment and significan­tly harm global growth,” it said. “Support for multilater­alism has been waning, a dangerous undercurre­nt that may undermine confidence in policymake­rs’ ability to respond to future crises,” the report said.

Nonetheles­s, despite trade tensions and continued monetary policy normalisat­ion in a few advanced economies, global financial markets have remained buoyant and appeared complacent about the risk of a sudden, sharp tightening in financial conditions, the world body said.

The IMF report finds that short- term risks to the financial system have increased somewhat over the past six months.

“Trade tensions have escalated, policy uncertaint­ies have increased in a number of countries, and some emerging market economies are facing financial- market pressures,” Tobias Adrian, financial counsellor and director of the monetary and capital markets department of the IMF, said.

Looking further ahead, risks remain elevated, he said. To be sure, the financial system is stronger today than before the global financial crisis, thanks to a decade of reform and recovery. “However, vulnerabil­ities continue to build, and the new financial system remains untested. Additional steps are needed to improve its resilience,” Mr Adrian said. If pressures on emerging market economies were to broaden and intensify, financial stability risks would increase significan­tly, he said.

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